Defect‐Engineering‐Mediated Long‐Lived Charge‐Transfer Excited‐State in Fe–Gallate Complex Improves Iron Cycle and Enables Sustainable Fenton‐Like Reaction

Author:

Shi Yanfeng1ORCID,Zhang Gong2,Xiang Chao2ORCID,Liu Chengzhen1ORCID,Hu Jun3ORCID,Wang Junhu4ORCID,Ge Rile4ORCID,Ma Haixia3,Niu Yusheng1ORCID,Xu Yuanhong1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Biomedical Engineering, College of Life Sciences Qingdao University Qingdao 266071 China

2. Center for Water and Ecology, State Key Joint Laboratory of Environment Simulation and Pollution Control School of Environment Tsinghua University Beijing 100084 China

3. School of Chemical Engineering Northwest University Xi’ an 710069 China

4. Center for Advanced Mössbauer Spectroscopy Mössbauer Effect Data Center Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics Chinese Academy of Sciences Dalian 116000 China

Abstract

AbstractFenton reactions are inefficient because the Fe(II) catalyst cannot be recycled in time due to the lack of a rapid electron transport pathway. This results in huge H2O2 wastage in industrial applications. Here, it is shown that a sustainable heterogeneous Fenton system is attainable by enhancing the ligand‐to‐metal charge‐transfer (LMCT) excited‐state lifetime in Fe–gallate complex. By engineering oxygen defects in the complex, the lifetime is improved from 10–90 ps. The lengthened lifetime ensures sufficient concentrations of excited‐states for an efficient Fe cycle, realizing previously unattainable H2O2 activation kinetics and hydroxyl radical (OH) productivity. Spectroscopic and electrochemical studies show the cyclic reaction mechanism involves in situ Fe(II) regeneration and synchronous supply of oxygen atoms from water to recover dissociated Fe─O bonds. Trace amounts of this catalyst effectively destroy two drug‐resistant bacteria even after eight reaction cycles. This work reveals the link among LMCT excited‐state lifetime, Fe cycle, and catalytic activity and stability, with implications for de novo design of efficient and sustainable Fenton‐like processes.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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