作者
Linlu Shen,Hongyi Wang,Jing Kang,Jimin Shen,Pengwei Yan,Yingxu Gong,Jiaxu Zhang,Gang Fu,Shuyu Wang,Yizhen Cheng,Shengxin Zhao,Zhonglin Chen
摘要
In this study, the ultraviolet/peroxymonosulfate (UV/PMS) process was found to be an efficient and safe strategy for simultaneously controlling NDMA during the degradation of N,N-dimethylhydrazine compounds, such as 1,1,1′,1′-Tetramethyl-4,4′-(methylene-di-p-phenylene) disemicarbazide (TMDS). The distinct roles of sulfate radicals (SO4−), hydroxyl radicals (HO), PMS, and UV in TMDS degradation as well as NDMA formation and elimination, have been elucidated, involving the kinetics and multiple-path transformation mechanisms. Moreover, to assess the feasibility of this process, a comprehensive toxicity assessment of treated water for zebrafish embryos was conducted. Mineralization analysis and an assessment of electrical energy per order (EE/O) were performed on actual water samples. The results indicate that SO4−, HO, PMS, and UV together degraded TMDS, but only SO4− and PMS led to NDMA formation. UV irradiation may coordinate SO4− and HO to overcome the energy barriers of NDMA elimination by providing continuous energy. The degradation of TMDS involved hydroxylation, radical addition, bond cleavage and nitrosation. Notably, NDMA formation may be closely related to the electron transfer between SO4− or PMS and TMDS. Subsequently, the generated NDMA was controlled through photocleavage, radical addition, and hydroxylation. Additionally, the results of toxicity evaluation and EE/O analysis suggest UV/PMS is safe and has the potential for treating N,N-dimethylhydrazine compounds-containing water.