TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanistic insight into the bifurcated pH-dependent decontamination trends in zero-valent aluminum systems
AU - Liu, Yang
AU - Zhang, Xiaowen
AU - Yang, Fashuai
AU - Xing, Cuili
AU - Fan, Peng
AU - Sun, Yuankui
AU - Guan, Xiaohong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2026/1
Y1 - 2026/1
N2 - 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.
AB - 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.
KW - AlO hydration
KW - Alumina evolution
KW - Passivation layer
KW - Zero-valent aluminum
KW - pH-dependence
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105012445518
U2 - 10.1016/j.apcatb.2025.125794
DO - 10.1016/j.apcatb.2025.125794
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105012445518
SN - 0926-3373
VL - 380
JO - Applied Catalysis B: Environmental
JF - Applied Catalysis B: Environmental
M1 - 125794
ER -