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Efficient degradation and deiodination of iopamidol by UV/sulfite process: Assessment of typical process parameters and transformation paths

  • Yurong Gu
  • , Zi Song
  • , Zijun Dong*
  • , Feiyun Sun
  • , Chengchun Jiang
  • , Jikun Qi
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Shenzhen Polytechnic
  • Harbin Institute of Technology Shenzhen
  • Shenzhen University
  • School of Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology
  • Shenyang Jianzhu University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Iopamidol (IPM) is widely used in medical clinical examination and treatment and has immeasurable harm to the ecological environment. The combination of UV and sulfite (UV/sulfite) process was developed to degrade IPM in this study. In contrast to that almost no removal of IPM was observed under sulfite reduction alone, the UV/sulfite process could efficiently reductively degrade IPM with the observed rate constant (kobs) of 2.08 min−1, which was nearly 4 times that of UV irradiation alone. The major active species in the UV/sulfite process were identified as hydrated electrons (eaq-) by employing active species scavengers. The influence of the initial pH, sulfite dosage, IPM concentration, UV intensity and common water matrix were evaluated. The degradation of IPM reached nearly 100% within only 2.5 min at pH 9, and kobs increased at higher initial sulfite dosages and greater UV intensities. HCO3 had a limited effect on the degradation of IPM, while humic acid (HA) was found to be a strong inhibitor in the UV/sulfite process. With the synergistic action of UV/sulfite, most of the iodine in IPM was found to release in the form of iodide ions (up to approximately 98%), and a few formed iodide-containing organic compounds, reducing significantly the toxicity of degradation products. Under direct UV irradiation and free radical reduction (mainly eaq-), 15 transformation intermediates of IPM were produced by amide hydrolysis, deiodination, hydroxyl radical addition and hydrogen abstraction reactions, in which free radical attack accounted for the main part. Consequently, the UV/sulfite process has a strong potential for IPM degradation in aquatic environments.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107383
JournalEnvironment International
Volume167
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Deiodination
  • Hydrated electron
  • Iopamidol
  • Sulfite
  • UV

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