A synergistic Co3O4 nanoparticles and nitrogen-doped biochar composite for efficient peroxymonosulfate activation toward degradation of multiple antibiotic pollutants
Abstract
A nitrogen-doped biochar loaded with Co3O4 nanoparticles (Co–NBC-550) was developed to activate peroxymonosulfate (PMS) for antibiotic degradation in water. Tetracycline (TC, 20 mg L−1) was used as a model pollutant. Under pH 6.12 with PMS = 0.2 g L−1 and Co–NBC-550 = 0.2 g L−1, the Co–NBC-550/PMS system achieved 98% removal in 7 min (kobs = 0.52 min−1), 5.7× that of NBC/PMS. Characterization showed uniformly dispersed Co3O4 and a mesoporous framework with abundant active sites, together with enriched oxygen vacancies (VO) at the Co–O–C interface that facilitated PMS adsorption/activation. Reactive oxygen species (SO4˙−, ˙OH, and 1O2) played vital roles, with 1O2 dominating the non-radical pathway. XPS confirmed the Co2+/Co3+ redox cycle, while pyridinic-N, graphitic-N, and CO groups enhanced activity. Broad-spectrum performance was also observed: 93.12% removal of ofloxacin, 87.13% of sulfamethoxazole, and complete phenol removal within 7 min. LC-MS identified key intermediates and pathways; toxicity predictions (TEST) showed lower acute toxicity and bioaccumulation of products. Reusability (5 cycles) and continuous-flow operation (600 min) confirmed stable performance. These results highlight Co–NBC-550 as an efficient and practical PMS catalyst for antibiotic-contaminated waters, with TC as a mechanistic model.