Nature Communications (Mar 2024)

Tailoring d-band center of high-valent metal-oxo species for pollutant removal via complete polymerization

  • Hong-Zhi Liu,
  • Xiao-Xuan Shu,
  • Mingjie Huang,
  • Bing-Bing Wu,
  • Jie-Jie Chen,
  • Xi-Sheng Wang,
  • Hui-Lin Li,
  • Han-Qing Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46739-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Polymerization-driven removal of pollutants in advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) offers a sustainable way for the simultaneous achievement of contamination abatement and resource recovery, supporting a low-carbon water purification approach. However, regulating such a process remains a great challenge due to the insufficient microscopic understanding of electronic structure-dependent reaction mechanisms. Herein, this work probes the origin of catalytic pollutant polymerization using a series of transition metal (Cu, Ni, Co, and Fe) single-atom catalysts and identifies the d-band center of active site as the key driver for polymerization transfer of pollutants. The high-valent metal-oxo species, produced via peroxymonosulfate activation, are found to trigger the pollutant removal via polymerization transfer. Phenoxyl radicals, identified by the innovative spin-trapping and quenching approaches, act as the key intermediate in the polymerization reactions. More importantly, the oxidation capacity of high-valent metal-oxo species can be facilely tuned by regulating their binding strength for peroxymonosulfate through d-band center modulation. A 100% polymerization transfer ratio is achieved by lowering the d-band center. This work presents a paradigm to dynamically modulate the electronic structure of high-valent metal-oxo species and optimize pollutant removal from wastewater via polymerization.