Nitroaromatic compounds (NACs) are a class of prevalent contaminants. Abiotic reduction is an important fate process that initiates NAC degradation in the environment. Many linear free energy relationship (LFER) models have been developed to predict NAC reduction rates. Almost all LFERs to date utilize experimental aqueous-phase one-electron reduction potential (E H 1) of NAC as a predictor, and thus, their utility is limited by the availability of E H 1 data. A promising new approach that utilizes computed hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) Gibbs free energy instead of E H 1 as a predictor was recently proposed. In this study, we evaluated the feasibility of HAT energy for predicting NAC reduction rate constants. Using dithionite-reduced quinones, we measured the second-order rate constants for the reduction of seven NACs by three hydroquinones of different protonation states. We computed the gas-phase energies for HAT and electron affinity (EA) of NACs and established HAT- and EA-based LFERs for six hydroquinone species. The results suggest that HAT energy is a reliable predictor of NAC reduction rate constants and is superior to EA. This is the first independent, experimental validation of HAT-based LFER, a new approach that enables rate prediction for a broad range of structurally diverse NACs based solely on molecular structures.
3-Nitro-1,2,4-triazol-5-one (NTO) is an insensitive munition compound (MC) that has replaced legacy MC. NTO can be highly mobile in soil and groundwater due to its high solubility and anionic nature, yet little is known about the processes that control its environmental fate. We studied NTO reduction by the hematite–Fe2+ redox couple to assess the importance of this process for the attenuation and remediation of NTO. Fe2+ (aq) was either added (type I) or formed through hematite reduction by dithionite (type II). In the presence of both hematite and Fe2+ (aq), NTO was quantitatively reduced to 3-amino-1,2,4-triazol-5-one following first-order kinetics. The surface area-normalized rate constant (k SA) showed a strong pH dependency between 5.5 and 7.0 and followed a linear free energy relationship (LFER) proposed in a previous study for nitrobenzene reduction by iron oxide–Fe2+ couples, i.e., log k SA = −(pe + pH) + constant. Sulfite, a major dithionite oxidation product, lowered k SA in type II system by ∼10-fold via at least two mechanisms: by complexing Fe2+ and thereby raising pe, and by making hematite more negatively charged and hence impeding NTO adsorption. This study demonstrates the importance of iron oxide–Fe2+ in controlling NTO transformation, presents an LFER for predicting NTO reduction rate, and illustrates how solutes can shift the LFER by interacting with either iron species.
3-Nitro-1,2,4-triazol-5-one (NTO) is a major and the most water-soluble constituent in the insensitive munition formulations IMX-101 and IMX-104. While NTO is known to undergo redox reactions in soils, its reaction with soil humic acid has not been evaluated. We studied NTO reduction by anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS) and Leonardite humic acid (LHA) reduced with dithionite. Both LHA and AQDS reduced NTO to 3-amino-1,2,4-triazol-5-one (ATO), stoichiometrically at alkaline pH and partially (50−60%) at pH ≤ 6.5. Due to NTO and hydroquinone speciation, the pseudo-first-order rate constants (k Obs ) varied by 3 orders of magnitude from pH 1.5 to 12.5 but remained constant from pH 4 to 10. This distinct pH dependency of k Obs suggests that NTO reactivity decreases upon deprotonation and offsets the increasing AQDS reactivity with pH. The reduction of NTO by LHA deviated continuously from firstorder behavior for >600 h. The extent of reduction increased with pH and LHA electron content, likely due to greater reactivity of and/or accessibility to hydroquinone groups. Only a fraction of the electrons stored in LHA was utilized for NTO reduction. Electron balance analysis and LHA redox potential profile suggest that the physical conformation of LHA kinetically limited NTO access to hydroquinone groups. This study demonstrates the importance of carbonaceous materials in controlling the environmental fate of NTO.
No single linear free energy relationship (LFER) exists that can predict reduction rate constants of all munition constituents (MCs). To address this knowledge gap, we measured the reduction rates of MCs and their surrogates including nitroaromatics [NACs; 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), 2,4-dinitroanisole (DNAN), 2-amino-4,6-dinitrotoluene (2-A-DNT), 4-amino-2,6-dinitrotoluene (4-A-DNT), and 2,4-dinitrotoluene (DNT)], nitramines [hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX) and nitroguanidine (NQ)], and azoles [3-nitro-1,2,4-triazol-5-one (NTO) and 3,4-dinitropyrazole (DNP)] by three dithionite-reduced quinones (lawsone, AQDS, and AQS). All MCs/NACs were reduced by the hydroquinones except NQ. Hydroquinone and MC speciations were varied by controlling pH, permitting the application of a speciation model to determine second-order rate constants (k) from observed pseudo-first-order rate constants. The intrinsic reactivity of MCs (oxidants) decreased upon deprotonation, while the opposite was true for hydroquinones (reductants). The rate constants spanned ∼6 orders of magnitude in the order NTO ≈ TNT > DNP > DNT ≈ DNAN ≈ 2-A-DNT > DNP – > 4-A-DNT > NTO – > RDX. LFERs developed using density functional theory-calculated electron transfer and hydrogen atom transfer energies and reported one-electron reduction potentials successfully predicted k, suggesting that these structurally diverse MCs/NACs are all reduced by hydroquinones through the same mechanism and rate-limiting step. These results increase the applicability of LFER models for predicting the fate and half-lives of MCs and related nitro compounds in reducing environments.
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) comprises a sizeable portion of the redox-active constituents in the environment and is an important reductant for the abiotic transformation of nitroaromatic compounds and munition constituents (NACs/MCs). Building a predictive kinetic model for these reactions would require the energies associated with both the reduction of the NACs/MCs and the oxidation of the DOM. The heterogeneous and unknown structure of DOM, however, has prohibited reliable determination of its oxidation energies. To overcome this limitation, humic acids (HAs) were used as model DOM, and their redox moieties were modeled as a collection of quinones of different redox potentials. The reduction and oxidation energies of the NACs/MCs and hydroquinones, respectively, via hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) reactions were then calculated quantum chemically. HAT energies have been used successfully in a linear free energy relationship (LFER) to predict second-order rate constants for NAC reduction by hydroquinones. Furthermore, a linear relationship between the HAT energies and the reduction potentials of quinones was established, which allows estimation of hydroquinone reactivity (i.e., rate constants) from HA redox titration data. A training set of three HAs and two NACs/MCs was used to generate a mean HA redox profile that successfully predicted reduction kinetics in multiple HA/MC systems.
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