Mechanistic insight into the bifurcated pH-dependent decontamination trends in zero-valent aluminum systems

Yang Liu, Xiaowen Zhang, Fashuai Yang, Cuili Xing, Peng Fan, Yuankui Sun, Xiaohong Guan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Zero-valent aluminum (ZVAl) shows promise for environmental remediation, yet its decontamination performance under circumneutral conditions remains debated. To unravel this paradox, we employed Se(IV) and nitrate (NO3) as model pollutants to probe how contaminant-specific modulation of Al2O3 transformation dictates ZVAl performance across pH0 2.0–11.0. Results revealed that Se(IV) sequestration exhibited U-shaped kinetics with minimum efficiency at pH0 4.0–7.0 (5.8–14.2 %), whereas NO3 reduction displayed an inverted U-shaped trend with maximum efficiency (> 95 %) obtained in the same pH range. Mechanistic studies demonstrated that these contrasting trends originate from pollutant-mediated Al2O3 evolution. Specifically, Lewis-basicity-dependent competition for Al2O3 surface sites dictates whether hydration or dissolution dominates activation. Se(IV), acting as a strong Lewis base, inhibited Al2O3 hydration by competing with OH for Al2O3 surface sites and/or forming passivating [tbnd]Al-O-SeO32− complexes, thereby self-limiting its own removal. Conversely, NO3 with weak Lewis basicity negligibly affected Al2O3 hydration to form porous Al(OH)3, which can enhance electron transfer by reducing interfacial charge transfer resistance. This work resolves the long-standing pH limitation paradox in ZVAl systems by elucidating the role of Al2O3 evolution, thereby offering a mechanistic framework for the design of adaptive metal-based remediation technologies.

Original languageEnglish
Article number125794
JournalApplied Catalysis B: Environmental
Volume380
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2026

Keywords

  • AlO hydration
  • Alumina evolution
  • Passivation layer
  • Zero-valent aluminum
  • pH-dependence

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