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Ozone: Science & Engineering
The Journal of the International Ozone Association
Volume 30, 2008 - Issue 4
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Original Articles

The Impact of Traces of Hydrogen Peroxide and Phosphate on the Ozone Decomposition Rate in “Pure Water”

, &
Pages 300-309 | Received 24 Oct 2007, Accepted 09 Apr 2007, Published online: 24 Jul 2008
 

Abstract

To obtain an idea of the magnitudes of the ozone loss rates rO3 in practical applications of ozone, an overall determination of the ozone decay profiles and rate constants was carried out in four different systems. These systems resemble different conditions for industrial application of ozone and the peroxone process, such as in the field of micro electronics, drinking water purification, disinfection, etc. Therefore, the behavior of ozone was monitored in the pH range from 4.5 to 9.0, in pure water and phosphate buffered systems in absence and presence of small amounts of hydrogen peroxide (10−7 M to 10−5 M H2O2). First the reproducibility of the ozone decay profiles was checked and from the various kinetic formalism tests, the reaction order 1.5 for the ozone decay rate has been selected. As expected, hydrogen peroxide increases the decay rates. In pure systems, added concentrations of 10−7M H2O2 already cause a remarkable acceleration of the ozone decay in the acidic and neutral pH range compared to the pure systems. However for alkaline pH conditions almost no effect of the low hydrogen peroxide concentrations was noticed. Contradictory to literature data, in the absence of hydrogen peroxide, ozone displays faster decays in the buffered systems of low ionic strength of 0.02 compared to pure water. This acceleration is more pronounced for acidic pH conditions. Low concentrations of phosphate may indeed accelerate the ozone decay in the presence of organic matter. Adding H2O2 concentrations below 10−5M to phosphate buffered solutions has a negligible effect on the ozone decay rate compared with pure water systems, except for pH 7. It appears that phosphate masks the effect of hydrogen peroxide below 10−5 M as tested here. Thus the application of AOP's by adding low concentrations of hydrogen peroxide is not well feasible in the presence of phosphate buffers in pure water systems.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

K. Vandersmissen acknowledges the financial support of the FWO-Vlaanderen.

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