scholarly journals Optimization, Kinetics, Thermodynamic and Arrhenius Model of the Removal of Ciprofloxacin by Internal Electrolysis with Fe-Cu and Fe-C Materials

Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 2110
Author(s):  
Tra Huong Do ◽  
Xuan Linh Ha ◽  
Thi Tu Anh Duong ◽  
Phuong Chi Nguyen ◽  
Ngoc Bich Hoang ◽  
...  

The ciprofloxacin (CIP) removal ability of a Fe-Cu electrolytic material was examined with respect to pH (2–9), time (15–150 min), shaking speed (100–250 rpm), material mass (0.2–3 g/L), temperature (298, 308, 323) and initial CIP concentration (30–200 mg/L). The Fe-Cu electrolytic materials were fabricated by the chemical plating method, and Fe-C materials were mechanically mixed from iron powder and graphite. The results show that at a pH value of 3, shaking time 120 min, shaking speed 250 rpm, a mass of Fe-Cu, Fe-C material of 2 g/L and initial CIP concentration of 203.79 mg/L, the CIP removal efficiency of Fe-Cu material reached 90.25% and that of Fe-C material was 85.12%. The removal of CIP on Fe-Cu and Fe-C materials follows pseudo-first-order kinetics. The activation energy of CIP removal of Fe-Cu material is 14.93 KJ/mol and of Fe-C material is 16.87 KJ/mol. The positive ΔH proves that CIP removal is endothermic. A negative entropy of 0.239 kJ/mol and 0.235 kJ/mol (which is near zero and is also relatively positive) indicated the rapid removal of the CIP molecules into the removed products.

2012 ◽  
Vol 441 ◽  
pp. 549-554
Author(s):  
Ying Jie Cai ◽  
Xiao Jun Yang ◽  
Dong Sheng Xia ◽  
Qing Fu Zeng

Abstract. Degradation of reactive brilliant red X-3B (X-3B) by a UV/Mn2+/H2O2/micro- aeration method was investigated. The influencing factors of degradation of X-3B including UV irradiation, aeration, pH value, H2O2 concentration and X-3B concentration were examined. The results show that X-3B was effectively degraded by the UV/Mn2+/H2O2/micro-aeration method. The degradation rate of X-3B was obtained from weighted linear least squares analysis of the experimental data, and accorded with the pseudo-first order kinetics equation.


2010 ◽  
Vol 113-116 ◽  
pp. 176-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meng Li ◽  
Dong Lei Zou ◽  
Hao Chen Zou ◽  
Dong Yan Fan

Using iron filings, activated carbon power and clay as raw materials, the granular iron-carbon micro-electrolysis packing was made by the method of calcination. The influence of initial chlorobenzene (CB) concentration, pH value and reaction temperature on the removal rate of simulated wastewater containing CB were investigated. The results showed that the reaction followed the pseudo-first-order kinetics model and the rate constants varied at a relatively low degree at various pH. Temperature is an important parameter and an increase in temperature could significantly raise the reaction rates. The column packed with packing was designed to remove CB in wastewater. After running for 70 days, the packing still had good performance and there was no obvious decrease on the removal rate.


1987 ◽  
Vol 52 (7) ◽  
pp. 1758-1763 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Gwang Hun ◽  
Lubomír Nondek

Kinetics of the addition of tetrachloromethane to styrene catalyzed by copper-amine complexes was studied. The pseudo-first order kinetics in respect to styrene and the catalyst was observed at an excess of tetrachloromethane. The reaction mechanism involving a catalytic cycle compatible with the kinetic observations is proposed. The experimental activation energy, being about 104 kJ mol-1, indicates a catalytic mechanism.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Alarjah

Background: Prodrugs principle is widely used to improve the pharmacological and pharmacokinetic properties of some active drugs. Much effort was made to develop metronidazole prodrugs to enhance antibacterial activity and or to improve pharmacokinetic properties of the molecule or to lower the adverse effects of metronidazole. Objective: In this work, the pharmacokinetic properties of some of monoterpenes and eugenol pro metronidazole molecules that were developed earlier were evaluated in-vitro. The kinetic hydrolysis rate constants and half-life time estimation of the new metronidazole derivatives were calculated using the validated RP-HPLC method. Method: Chromatographic analysis was done using Zorbbax Eclipse eXtra Dense Bonding (XDB)-C18 column of dimensions (250 mm, 4.6 mm, 5 μm), at ambient column temperature. The mobile phase was a mixture of sodium dihydrogen phosphate buffer of pH 4.5 and methanol in gradient elution, at 1ml/min flow rate. The method was fully validated according to the International Council for Harmonization (ICH) guidelines. The hydrolysis process carried out in an acidic buffer pH 1.2 and in an alkaline buffer pH 7.4 in a thermostatic bath at 37ºC. Results: The results followed pseudo-first-order kinetics. All metronidazole prodrugs were stable in the acidic pH, while they were hydrolysed in the alkaline buffer within a few hours (6-8 hr). The rate constant and half-life values were calculated, and their values were found to be 0.082- 0.117 hr-1 and 5.9- 8.5 hr., respectively. Conclusion: The developed method was accurate, sensitive, and selective for the prodrugs. For most of the prodrugs, the hydrolysis followed pseudo-first-order kinetics; the method might be utilised to conduct an in-vivo study for the metronidazole derivatives with monoterpenes and eugenol.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 720
Author(s):  
Do Tra Huong ◽  
Nguyen Van Tu ◽  
Duong Thi Tu Anh ◽  
Nguyen Anh Tien ◽  
Tran Thi Kim Ngan ◽  
...  

Fe-Cu materials were synthesized using the chemical plating method from Fe powder and CuSO4 5% solution and then characterized for surface morphology, composition and structure by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) and X-ray diffraction (XRD), respectively. The as-synthesized Fe-Cu material was used for removal of phenol from aqueous solution by internal microelectrolysis. The internal electrolysis-induced phenol decomposition was then studied with respect to various parameters such as pH, time, Fe-Cu material weight, phenol concentration and shaking speed. The optimal phenol decomposition (92.7%) was achieved under the conditions of (1) a pH value of phenol solution of 3, (2) 12 h of shaking at the speed of 200 rpm, (3) Fe-Cu material weight of 10 g/L, (4) initial phenol concentration of 100.98 mg/L and (5) at room temperature (25 ± 0.5 °C). The degradation of phenol using Fe-Cu materials obeyed the second-order apparent kinetics equation with a reaction rate constant of k of 0.009 h−1L mg−1. The optimal process was then tested against real coking wastewater samples, resulting in treated wastewater with favorable water indicators. Current findings justify the use of Fe-Cu materials in practical internal electrolysis processes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 02 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel M. de la Fournière ◽  
Jorge M. Meichtry ◽  
Graciela S. Custo ◽  
Eduardo A. Gautier ◽  
Marta I. Litter

Background: Thiomersal (TM), a complex between 2-mercaptobenzoic acid (2-MBA) and ethylmercury (C2H5Hg+), is an antimicrobial preservative used in immunological, ophthalmic, cosmetic products, and vaccines. Objective: TM has been treated by UV/TiO2 photocatalysis in the presence or absence of oxygen at acidic pH. C2H5Hg+, 2-MBA, and 2-sulfobenzoic acid (2-SBA) were found as products. A 2-SBA photocatalytic treatment was undertaken to study sulfur evolution. Methods: Photocatalytic runs were performed using a UVA lamp (λmax = 352 nm), open to the air or under N2. A suspension of the corresponding TM or 2-SBA salt and TiO2 was prepared, and pH was adjusted. Suspensions were stirred in the dark for 30 min and then irradiated. TM, 2-MBA, 2-SBA, and C2H5Hg+ were quantified by HPLC, sulfur by TXRF, and the deposits on the photocatalyst were analyzed by chemical reactions. The mineralization degree was followed by TOC. Sulfate was determined using BaCl2 at 580 nm. Results: Photocatalytic destruction of TM and total C2H5Hg+ was complete under N2 and air, but TM degradation was much faster in air. The evolution of TM and the products followed a pseudo-first-order kinetics. Conclusion: TiO2-photocatalytic degradation is a suitable technique for the treatment of TM and its degradation products. In contrast to other organomercurial compounds, TM degradation is faster in the presence of O2, indicating that the oxidative mechanism is the preferred pathway. A significant TM mineralization (> 60%, NPOC and total S) was obtained. TM was more easily degraded than 2-SBA. Sulfate was the final product.


Author(s):  
Zhiliang Zhang ◽  
Jiaqi Lu ◽  
Bingqian Lv ◽  
Wei Liu ◽  
Shuyuan Shen ◽  
...  

The gas-liquid jet flow was proved to be capable of inducing chemical consequences which can lead to the decomposition of methylene blue (MB). The reaction process follows a pseudo-first-order kinetics....


1976 ◽  
Vol 31 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 29-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Rosenkranz ◽  
I. Basic Kinetics ◽  
Hartmut Schmidt

The kinetics of the photodynamic desactivation of lysozyme in presence of acridine orange as the sensitizer have been investigated in detail varying oxygen, protein, dye concentration, ionic strength and pH value. The kinetics can be approximately described as an over all pseudo-first- order rate process. Changing the solvent from water to D2O or by quenching experiments in pres­ence of azide ions it could be shown that the desactivation of lysozyme is caused exclusively by singlet oxygen. The excited oxygen occurs via the triplet state of the dye with a rate constant considerably lower than that to be expected for a diffusionally controlled reaction. Singlet oxygen reacts chemically (desactivation, k=2.9 × 107 ᴍ-1 sec-1) and physically (quenching process, k = 4.1 × 108 ᴍ-1sec-1) with the enzyme. The kinetical analysis shows that additional chemical reactions between singlet oxygen and lysozyme would have only little influence on the kinetics of the desactivation as long as their products would be enzymatically active and their kinetical constants would be less than about 1 × 108 ᴍ-1 sec-1.


2001 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 589-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian M. Dust ◽  
Christopher S. Warren

Abstract The kinetics of the alkaline rearrangement of O,O-dimethyl-(2,2,2-trichloro-1- hydroxyethyl)phosphonate, (trichlorfon, 1), the active insecticidal component in such formulations as Dylox, was followed at 25±0.5°C by high pressure liquid chromatography (UV-vis detector, 210 nm). The rearrangement product, O,Odimethyl- O-(2,2-dichloroethenyl)phosphate (dichlorovos, 2), which is a more potent biocide than trichlorfon, undergoes further reaction, and the kinetics, consequently, cannot be treated by a standard pseudo-first-order plot. A two-point van't Hoff (initial rates) method was used to obtain pseudo-first-order rate constants (kѱ) at 25, 35 and 45°C: 2.6 × 10-6, 7.4 × 10-6 and 2.5 × 10-5 s-1, respectively. Arrhenius treatment of this data gave an activation energy (Ea) of 88 kJ·mol-1 with a pre-exponential factor (A) of 5.5 × 109 s-1. Kinetic trials at pH 8.0 using phosphate and tris buffer systems show no buffer catalysis in this reaction and indicate that the rearrangement is subject to specific base catalysis. Estimates are reported for pseudo-first-order half-lives for trichlorfon at pH 8.0 for environmental conditions in aqueous systems in the Corner Brook region of western Newfoundland, part of the site of a recent trichlorfon aerial spray program.


1996 ◽  
Vol 314 (3) ◽  
pp. 985-991 ◽  
Author(s):  
Subrata ADAK ◽  
Abhijit MAZUMDER ◽  
Ranajit K. BANERJEE

The plausible role of arginine and tyrosine residues at the active site of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in aromatic donor (guaiacol) oxidation was probed by chemical modification followed by characterization of the modified enzyme. The arginine-specific reagents phenylglyoxal (PGO), 2,3-butanedione and 1,2-cyclohexanedione all inactivated the enzyme, following pseudo-first-order kinetics with second-order rate constants of 24 M-1·min-1, 0.8 M-1·min-1 and 0.54 M-1·min-1 respectively. Modification with tetranitromethane, a tyrosine-specific reagent, also resulted in 50% loss of activity following pseudo-first-order kinetics with a second-order rate constant of 2.0 M-1·min-1. The substrate, H2O2, and electron donors such as I- and SCN- offered no protection against inactivation by both types of modifier, whereas the enzyme was completely protected by guaiacol or o-dianisidine, an aromatic electron donor (second substrate) oxidized by the enzyme. These studies indicate the involvement of arginine and tyrosine residues at the aromatic donor site of HRP. The guaiacol-protected phenylglyoxal-modified enzyme showed almost the same binding parameter (Kd) as the native enzyme, and a similar free energy change (∆G´) for the binding of the donor. Stoicheiometric studies with [7-14C]phenylglyoxal showed incorporation of 2 mol of phenylglyoxal per mol of enzyme, indicating modification of one arginine residue for complete inactivation. The difference absorption spectrum of the tetranitromethane-modified against the native enzyme showed a peak at 428 nm, characteristic of the nitrotyrosyl residue, that was abolished by treatment with sodium dithionite, indicating specific modification of a tyrosine residue. Inactivation stoicheiometry showed that modification of one tyrosine residue per enzyme caused 50% inactivation. Binding studies by optical difference spectroscopy indicated that the arginine-modified enzyme could not bind guaiacol at all, whereas the tyrosine-modified enzyme bound it with reduced affinity (Kd 35 mM compared with 10 mM for the native enzyme). Both the modified enzymes, however, retained the property of the formation of compound II (one-electron oxidation state higher than native ferriperoxidase) with H2O2, but reduction of compound II to native enzyme by guaiacol did not occur in the PGO-modified enzyme, owing to lack of binding. No non-specific change in protein structure due to modification was evident from circular dichroism studies. We therefore suggest that the active site of HRP for aromatic donor oxidation is composed of an arginine and an adjacent tyrosine residue, of which the former plays an obligatory role in aromatic donor binding whereas the latter residue plays a facilitatory role, presumably by hydrophobic interaction or hydrogen bonding.


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