Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Electrostatic Field in Contact‐Electro‐Catalysis Driven C−F Bond Cleavage of Perfluoroalkyl Substances

44

Citations

48

References

2024

Year

Abstract

Perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) are persistent and toxic to human health. It is demanding for high-efficient and green technologies to remove PFASs from water. In this study, a novel PFAS treatment technology was developed, utilizing polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) particles (1-5 μm) as the catalyst and a low frequency ultrasound (US, 40 kHz, 0.3 W/cm<sup>2</sup>) for activation. Remarkably, this system can induce near-complete defluorination for different structured PFASs. The underlying mechanism relies on contact electrification between PTFE and water, which induces cumulative electrons on PTFE surface, and creates a high surface voltage (tens of volts). Such high surface voltage can generate abundant reactive oxygen species (ROS, i.e., O<sub>2</sub>⋅<sup>-</sup>, HO⋅, etc.) and a strong interfacial electrostatic field (IEF of 10<sup>9</sup>~10<sup>10</sup> V/m). Consequently, the strong IEF significantly activates PFAS molecules and reduces the energy barrier of O<sub>2</sub>⋅<sup>-</sup> nucleophilic reaction. Simultaneously, the co-existence of surface electrons (PTFE*(e<sup>-</sup>)) and HO⋅ enables synergetic reduction and oxidation of PFAS and its intermediates, leading to enhanced and thorough defluorination. The US/PTFE method shows compelling advantages of low energy consumption, zero chemical input, and few harmful intermediates. It offers a new and promising solution for effectively treating the PFAS-contaminated drinking water.

References

YearCitations

Page 1