Durable fluorinated cobalt oxyhydroxide/calcium alginate hydrogels for activating peroxymonosulfate to enable nearly 100% degradation of ciprofloxacin†
Abstract
Peroxymonosulfate (PMS) activation by solid catalysts for ciprofloxacin (CIP) removal is a promising method for decontaminating wastewater. However, mainstream catalysts suffer from efficiency and durability issues due to mechanical fragility and structural instability. Here, we have developed a durable calcium alginate hydrogel encapsulating fluorinated cobalt oxyhydroxide (FCO/CAH), fabricated by a simple hydrogen-bond-assisted cross-linking reaction, to enhance PMS activation for complete CIP removal. The optimized 2-FCO/CAH could generate abundant singlet oxygen (1O2) and sulfate radicals (SO4˙−) with PMS, resulting in 0.433 min−1 kinetic constant and approximately 100% CIP degradation within 10 minutes. This exceptional degradation efficiency is due to the even distribution of 2-FCO, which maximizes catalytic sites for PMS activation, and the multichannel cavity structure of CAH, which effectively enriches both PMS and CIP. Furthermore, the durability of 2-FCO/CAH was proved by its negligible decay in CIP removal efficiency (∼100%) and good microstructure retention after 6 consecutive cycles, facilitated by a stable surface reconstructed interphase on the 2-FCO surface and the strong mechanical property of 2-FCO/CAH. Our work showcases a facile approach to constructing durable hydrogel catalysts that improve PMS-mediated antibiotic degradation.