Microalgae-derived lipids are good sources of biofuel, but extracting them involves high cost, energy expenditure, and environmental risk. Surfactant-assisted disruption offers a novel strategy for more efficient, sustainable and economical extraction of fuel feedstock from microalgae.
Per-
and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) comprise a group of
widespread and recalcitrant contaminants that are attracting increasing
concern due to their persistence and adverse health effects. This
study evaluated removal of one of the most prevalent PFAS, perfluorooctanoic
acid (PFOA), in H2-based membrane catalyst-film reactors
(H2-MCfRs) coated with palladium nanoparticles (Pd0NPs). Batch tests documented that Pd0NPs catalyzed
hydrodefluorination of PFOA to partially fluorinated and nonfluorinated
octanoic acids; the first-order rate constant for PFOA removal was
0.030 h–1, and a maximum defluorination rate was
16 μM/h in our bench-scale MCfR. Continuous-flow tests achieved
stable long-term depletion of PFOA to below the EPA health advisory
level (70 ng/L) for up to 70 days without catalyst loss or deactivation.
Two distinct mechanisms for Pd0-based PFOA removal were
identified based on insights from experimental results and density
functional theory (DFT) calculations: (1) nonreactive chemisorption
of PFOA in a perpendicular orientation on empty metallic surface sites
and (2) reactive defluorination promoted by physiosorption of PFOA
in a parallel orientation above surface sites populated with activated
hydrogen atoms (Hads
*). Pd0-based catalytic reduction chemistry and continuous-flow treatment
may be broadly applicable to the ambient-temperature destruction of
other PFAS compounds.
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