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Food waste digestate
atmosphere
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[36] | [65] |
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sp.2 carbon served to produce radicals by PDS activation in an electron-accepting process
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C=O adsorbed dissolved O3 and initiated its rapid decomposition for ∙O2− generation
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Graphitic and pyridinic N facilitated ROS generation
C=O was oxidized into O-C=O after reaction
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C=O contributed to 1O2 formation
Presence of HCO3− promoted •OH and HCO3• formation, reacting with O3 for •O2− generation
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Removal efficiency decreased from 95.4% to 59.3% in 4th cycle
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| [46] | [71] |
[ | 49 | ] | [98] |
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Functional C groups, Si-O groups, metallic oxides of Zn, Al, Fe, and Mg are expected as the active sites
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Consumption of sp.3 and sp.2 carbons indicated and electron transfer regime from amorphous carbon to graphitic carbon, as the latter serves as a reactive site
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C=O, pyridinic N, and pyridinic N were active sites for the activation by electron transfer to H2
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Sieving to small-sized biochar (0–75 µm) enhanced PDS activation due to more graphitic and aromatic carbon, COOH content, and higher SSA
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Reaction was suggested to be mediated by •OH
O2
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Excessive adsorption under acidic conditions leads to competition with ozonation process -
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COOH groups promoted SO4•− and •OH formation
Removal efficiency fell to 79.1% in 5th cycle
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Biochar mediated electron transfer from SMT to PDS
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Electron-rich active sites transfer electrons to PDS for SO4•−, •OH, 1O2, and •O2− generation
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| [37] | [59] |
[ | 47 | ] | [77] |
[ | 50 | ] | [99] |
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Spent tea leave
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Pre-oxidation: 250 °C, 0.5 h, air environment
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Pyrolysis: 500 °C, 1 h, N2 atmosphere
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SSA and porosity were crucial in SMT adsorption and catalytic •OH generation
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Biochar surface acidity was negatively correlated with catalytic activation, whereas surface basicity was positively correlated with catalytic activation
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O3 direct or indirect attack on C=O, C=C, and -OH on biochar initiated radical chain reactions
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Excessive SMT adsorption prior to activation hindered H
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Delocalized π-electrons react with H2O to form hydroxide OH− and H3O+ that will yield HO2, •O2−, and 2O2 activation
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Pre-adsorption was beneficial to the subsequent catalytic degradation
•OH after reaction with O3
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Delocalized π-electrons and Fe facilitated SO4•−
1O2, •O2−, and •OH were the main species responsible for degradation
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Removal efficiency decreased to 94.8% in 5th cycle
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| [38] | [66] |
[ | 48 | ] | [76] |
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