Oxidative treatment of bromide-containing waters: Formation of bromine and its reactions with inorganic and organic compounds - a critical review

Bromide (Br-) is present in all water sources at concentrations ranging from ~10 to >1000 µg L-1 in fresh waters and about 67 mg L-1 in seawater. During oxidative water treatment bromide is oxidized to hypobromous acid/hypobromite (HOBr/OBr-) and other bromine species. A systematic and critic...

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Main Authors: Heeb, M., Criquet, Justine, Zimmermman-Steffens, S., von Gunten, Urs
Format: Journal Article
Published: IWA Publishing 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12289
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author Heeb, M.
Criquet, Justine
Zimmermman-Steffens, S.
von Gunten, Urs
author_facet Heeb, M.
Criquet, Justine
Zimmermman-Steffens, S.
von Gunten, Urs
author_sort Heeb, M.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Bromide (Br-) is present in all water sources at concentrations ranging from ~10 to >1000 µg L-1 in fresh waters and about 67 mg L-1 in seawater. During oxidative water treatment bromide is oxidized to hypobromous acid/hypobromite (HOBr/OBr-) and other bromine species. A systematic and critical literature review has been conducted on the reactivity of HOBr/OBr- and other bromine species with inorganic and organic compounds, including micropollutants.The speciation of bromine in the absence and presence of chloride and chlorine has been calculated and it could be shown that HOBr/OBr- are the dominant species in fresh waters. In ocean waters, other bromine species such as Br2, BrCl, and Br2O gain importance and may have to be considered under certain conditions.HOBr reacts fast with many inorganic compounds such as ammonia, iodide, sulfite, nitrite, cyanide and thiocyanide with apparent second-order rate constants in the order of 104–109 M-1 s-1 at pH 7. No rate constants for the reactions with Fe(II) and As(III) are available. Mn(II) oxidation by bromine is controlled by a Mn(III,IV) oxide-catalyzed process involving Br2O and BrCl.Bromine shows a very high reactivity toward phenolic groups (apparent second-order rate constants kapp ˜ 103–105 M-1 s-1 at pH 7), amines and sulfamides (kapp ˜ 105–106 M-1 s-1 at pH 7) and S-containing compounds (kapp ˜ 105–107 M-1 s-1 at pH 7). For phenolic moieties, it is possible to derive second-order rate constants with a Hammett-s-based QSAR approach with log(k(HOBr/-PhO))=7.8-3.5Sslog(k(HOBr/PhO-))=7.8-3.5Ss. A negative slope is typical for electrophilic substitution reactions.In general, kapp of bromine reactions at pH 7 are up to three orders of magnitude greater than for chlorine. In the case of amines, these rate constants are even higher than for ozone. Model calculations show that depending on the bromide concentration and the pH, the high reactivity of bromine may outweigh the reactions of chlorine during chlorination of bromide-containing waters.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-122892017-09-13T14:57:35Z Oxidative treatment of bromide-containing waters: Formation of bromine and its reactions with inorganic and organic compounds - a critical review Heeb, M. Criquet, Justine Zimmermman-Steffens, S. von Gunten, Urs Inorganic compounds HOBr Water treatment Organic compounds Bromine Oxidation kinetics Bromide (Br-) is present in all water sources at concentrations ranging from ~10 to >1000 µg L-1 in fresh waters and about 67 mg L-1 in seawater. During oxidative water treatment bromide is oxidized to hypobromous acid/hypobromite (HOBr/OBr-) and other bromine species. A systematic and critical literature review has been conducted on the reactivity of HOBr/OBr- and other bromine species with inorganic and organic compounds, including micropollutants.The speciation of bromine in the absence and presence of chloride and chlorine has been calculated and it could be shown that HOBr/OBr- are the dominant species in fresh waters. In ocean waters, other bromine species such as Br2, BrCl, and Br2O gain importance and may have to be considered under certain conditions.HOBr reacts fast with many inorganic compounds such as ammonia, iodide, sulfite, nitrite, cyanide and thiocyanide with apparent second-order rate constants in the order of 104–109 M-1 s-1 at pH 7. No rate constants for the reactions with Fe(II) and As(III) are available. Mn(II) oxidation by bromine is controlled by a Mn(III,IV) oxide-catalyzed process involving Br2O and BrCl.Bromine shows a very high reactivity toward phenolic groups (apparent second-order rate constants kapp ˜ 103–105 M-1 s-1 at pH 7), amines and sulfamides (kapp ˜ 105–106 M-1 s-1 at pH 7) and S-containing compounds (kapp ˜ 105–107 M-1 s-1 at pH 7). For phenolic moieties, it is possible to derive second-order rate constants with a Hammett-s-based QSAR approach with log(k(HOBr/-PhO))=7.8-3.5Sslog(k(HOBr/PhO-))=7.8-3.5Ss. A negative slope is typical for electrophilic substitution reactions.In general, kapp of bromine reactions at pH 7 are up to three orders of magnitude greater than for chlorine. In the case of amines, these rate constants are even higher than for ozone. Model calculations show that depending on the bromide concentration and the pH, the high reactivity of bromine may outweigh the reactions of chlorine during chlorination of bromide-containing waters. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12289 10.1016/j.watres.2013.08.030 IWA Publishing restricted
spellingShingle Inorganic compounds
HOBr
Water treatment
Organic compounds
Bromine
Oxidation kinetics
Heeb, M.
Criquet, Justine
Zimmermman-Steffens, S.
von Gunten, Urs
Oxidative treatment of bromide-containing waters: Formation of bromine and its reactions with inorganic and organic compounds - a critical review
title Oxidative treatment of bromide-containing waters: Formation of bromine and its reactions with inorganic and organic compounds - a critical review
title_full Oxidative treatment of bromide-containing waters: Formation of bromine and its reactions with inorganic and organic compounds - a critical review
title_fullStr Oxidative treatment of bromide-containing waters: Formation of bromine and its reactions with inorganic and organic compounds - a critical review
title_full_unstemmed Oxidative treatment of bromide-containing waters: Formation of bromine and its reactions with inorganic and organic compounds - a critical review
title_short Oxidative treatment of bromide-containing waters: Formation of bromine and its reactions with inorganic and organic compounds - a critical review
title_sort oxidative treatment of bromide-containing waters: formation of bromine and its reactions with inorganic and organic compounds - a critical review
topic Inorganic compounds
HOBr
Water treatment
Organic compounds
Bromine
Oxidation kinetics
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12289