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Dive into the research topics where Hong-Bin Xie is active.

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Featured researches published by Hong-Bin Xie.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2014

Atmospheric chemical reactions of monoethanolamine initiated by OH radical: mechanistic and kinetic study.

Hong-Bin Xie; Chao Li; Ning He; Cheng Wang; Shaowen Zhang; Jingwen Chen

Monoethanolamine (MEA) is a benchmark and widely utilized solvent in amine-based postcombustion CO2 capture (PCCC), a leading technology for reducing CO2 emission from fossil fuel power plants. The large-scale implementation of PCCC would lead to inevitable discharges of amines to the atmosphere. Therefore, understanding the kinetics and mechanisms of the transformation of representative amine MEA in the atmosphere is of great significance for risk assessment of the amine-based PCCC. In this study, the H-abstraction reaction of MEA with ·OH, and ensuing reactions of produced MEA-radicals, including isomerization, dissociation, and bimolecular reaction MEA-radicals+O2, were investigated by quantum chemical calculation [M06-2X/aug-cc-pVTZ//M06-2X/6-311++G(d,p)] and kinetic modeling. The calculated overall rate constant [(7.27 × 10(-11)) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1)] for H-abstraction is in excellent agreement with the experimental value [(7.02 ± 0.46) × 10(-11) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1)]. The results show that the product branching ratio of NH2CH2 · CHOH (MEA-β) (43%) is higher than that of NH2 · CHCH2OH (MEA-α) (39%), clarifying that MEA-α is not an exclusive product. On the basis of the unveiled reaction mechanisms of MEA-radicals + O2, the proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry signal (m/z 60.044), not recognized in the experiment, was identified.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2014

Predicting gaseous reaction rates of short chain chlorinated paraffins with ·OH: overcoming the difficulty in experimental determination.

Chao Li; Hong-Bin Xie; Jingwen Chen; Xianhai Yang; Yifei Zhang; Xianliang Qiao

Short chain chlorinated paraffins (SCCPs) are under evaluation for inclusion in the Stockholm Convention on persistent organic pollutants. However, information on their reaction rate constants with gaseous ·OH (kOH) is unavailable, limiting the evaluation of their persistence in the atmosphere. Experimental determination of kOH is confined by the unavailability of authentic chemical standards for some SCCP congeners. In this study, we evaluated and selected density functional theory (DFT) methods to predict kOH of SCCPs, by comparing the experimental kOH values of six polychlorinated alkanes (PCAs) with those calculated by the different theoretical methods. We found that the M06-2X/6-311+G(3df,2pd)//B3LYP/6-311 +G(d,p) method is time-effective and can be used to predict kOH of PCAs. Moreover, based on the calculated kOH of nine SCCPs and available experimental kOH values of 22 PCAs with low carbon chain, a quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) model was developed. The molecular structural characteristics determining the ·OH reaction rate were discussed. logkOH was found to negatively correlate with the percentage of chlorine substitutions (Cl%). The DFT calculation method and the QSAR model are important alternatives to the conventional experimental determination of kOH for SCCPs, and are prospective in predicting their persistence in the atmosphere.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2015

Photodegradation mechanism of sulfonamides with excited triplet state dissolved organic matter: a case of sulfadiazine with 4-carboxybenzophenone as a proxy.

Yingjie Li; Xiaoxuan Wei; Jingwen Chen; Hong-Bin Xie; Ya-nan Zhang

Excited triplet states of dissolved organic matter ((3)DOM*) are important players for photodegradation sulfonamide antibiotics (SAs) in sunlit natural waters. However, the triplet-mediated reaction mechanism was poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the reaction adopting sulfadiazine as a representative SA and 4-carboxybenzophenone (CBBP)as a proxy of DOM. Results showed that the excited triplet state of CBBP ((3)CBBP*) is responsible for the photodegradation of sulfadiazine. The reaction of (3)CBBP* with substructure model compounds verified there are two reaction sites (amino-or sulfonyl-N atoms) of sulfadiazine. Density functional theory calculations were performed, which unveiled that electrons transfer from the N reaction sites to the carbonyl oxygen atom of (3)CBBP* moiety, followed by proton transfers, leading to the formation of sulfadiazine radicals. Laser flash photolysis experiments were performed to confirm the mechanism. Thus, this study identified that the photodegradation mechanism of SAs initiated by (3)DOM*, which is important for understanding the photochemical fate, predicting the photoproducts, and assessing the ecological risks of SAs in the aquatic environment.


Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2015

Transformation Pathways of Isomeric Perfluorooctanesulfonate Precursors Catalyzed by the Active Species of P450 Enzymes: In Silico Investigation

Zhiqiang Fu; Yong Wang; Zhongyu Wang; Hong-Bin Xie; Jingwen Chen

As evidenced from various in vitro and in vivo studies, metabolism of perfluorooctanesulfonate (PFOS) precursors by cytochrome P450 enzymes (CYPs) acts as an important indirect pathway for mammal PFOS exposure. Nevertheless, the mechanism of this transformation remains largely unclarified. In this study, in silico investigations adopting density functional theory (DFT) were performed to reveal the biotransformation of a typical PFOS precursor, N-ethyl perfluorooctane sulfonamide (N-EtPFOSA), catalyzed by the active species of CYPs (Compound I). Results unveil that in the enzymatic environment, N-EtPFOSA is hydroxylated feasibly (reaction energy barriers ΔE = 11.4-14.5 kcal/mol) with a H atom transfer (HAT) from the ethyl Cα to Compound I. The HAT derived Cα radical then barrierlessly combines with the OH radical to produce a ferric-ethanolamine intermediate. Subsequently, the ethanolamine intermediate decomposes via N-dealkylation to perfluorooctane sulfonamide (PFOSA) and acetaldehyde products nonenzymatically with the assistance of water molecules. The rate-limiting O-addition (ΔE = 21.2-34.0 kcal/mol) of Compound I to PFOSA initiated a novel deamination pathway that comprises O-S bond formation and S-N bond cleavage. The resulting hydroxylamine is then hydrolyzed to PFOS. In addition, the results reveal that both the N-dealkylation and deamination pathways are isomeric-specific, which is consistent with experimental observations. Accordingly, DFT calculations may help uncover possible toxicological effects by predicting the biotransformation mechanisms and products of xenobiotics by CYPs.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

Quantum Chemical Study on ·Cl-Initiated Atmospheric Degradation of Monoethanolamine.

Hong-Bin Xie; Fangfang Ma; Yuanfang Wang; Ning He; Qi Yu; Jingwen Chen

Recent findings on the formation of ·Cl in continental urban areas necessitate the consideration of ·Cl initiated degradation when assessing the fate of volatile organic pollutants. Monoethanolamine (MEA) is considered as a potential atmospheric pollutant since it is a benchmark and widely utilized solvent in a leading CO2 capture technology. Especially, ·Cl may have specific interactions with the N atom of MEA, which could make the MEA + ·Cl reaction have different pathways and products from those of the MEA + ·OH reaction. Hence, ·Cl initiated reactions with MEA were investigated by a quantum chemical method [CCSD(T)/aug-cc-pVTZ//MP2/6-31+G(3df,2p)] and kinetics modeling. Results show that the overall rate constant for ·Cl initiated H-abstraction of MEA is 5 times faster than that initiated by ·OH, and the tropospheric lifetimes of MEA will be overestimated by 6-46% when assuming that [·Cl]/[·OH] = 1-10% if the role of ·Cl is ignored. The MEA + ·Cl reaction exclusively produces MEA-N that finally transforms into several products including mutagenic nitramine and carcinogenic nitrosamine via further reactions with O2/NOx, and the contribution of ·Cl to their formation is about 25-250% of that of ·OH. Thus, it is necessary to consider ·Cl initiated tropospheric degradation of MEA for its risk assessment.


Chemosphere | 2013

Molecular dynamics simulations on the interactions of low molecular weight natural organic acids with C60.

Qian Sun; Hong-Bin Xie; Jingwen Chen; Xuehua Li; Zhuang Wang; Lianxi Sheng

As an important part of dissolved organic matter (DOM), low molecular weight organic acids (LOAs) may play a key role in the process for DOM stabilizing carbon nanomaterials (e.g. C60) suspensions in aquatic environment. In addition, both LOAs and C60 have been detected in the troposphere and therefore have a chance to interact with each other in the gaseous phase. However, the mechanism for LOAs-C60 interactions and their environmental implications need further investigations. In this study, molecular dynamics (MD) simulation was employed to investigate the interactions between both neutral and ionic LOAs with C60 in vacuum and water. The results showed that the adsorptions of all LOAs on C60 in energy are favorable, and the aromatic acids have stronger interactions with C60 than the aliphatic acids in vacuum and water. The interaction energies (Eint) of the LOA anions with C60 were weaker than those of their corresponding neutral LOA molecules. The models were also developed to predict and interpret Eint based on the results from MD simulations. Dispersion, induction and hydrophobic interactions were found to be the dominating factor in Eint. These findings indicate that cost-efficient MD simulation can be employed as an important tool to predict the adsorption behavior of LOAs on carbon nanomaterials.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Atmospheric Fate of Monoethanolamine: Enhancing New Particle Formation of Sulfuric Acid as an Important Removal Process

Hong-Bin Xie; Jonas Elm; Roope Halonen; Nanna Myllys; Theo Kurtén; Markku Kulmala; Hanna Vehkamäki

Monoethanolamine (MEA), a potential atmospheric pollutant from the capture unit of a leading CO2 capture technology, could be removed by participating H2SO4-based new particle formation (NPF) as simple amines. Here we evaluated the enhancing potential of MEA on H2SO4-based NPF by examining the formation of molecular clusters of MEA and H2SO4 using combined quantum chemistry calculations and kinetics modeling. The results indicate that MEA at the parts per trillion (ppt) level can enhance H2SO4-based NPF. The enhancing potential of MEA is less than that of dimethylamine (DMA), one of the strongest enhancing agents, and much greater than methylamine (MA), in contrast to the order suggested solely by their basicity (MEA < MA < DMA). The unexpectedly high enhancing potential is attributed to the role of -OH of MEA in increasing cluster binding free energies by acting as both a hydrogen bond donor and acceptor. After the initial formation of one H2SO4 and one MEA cluster, the cluster growth mainly proceeds by first adding one H2SO4, and then one MEA, which differs from growth pathways in H2SO4-DMA and H2SO4-MA systems. Importantly, the effective removal rate of MEA due to participation in NPF is comparable to that of oxidation by hydroxyl radicals at 278.15 K, indicating NPF as an important sink for MEA.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Effects of Atmospheric Water on ·OH-initiated Oxidation of Organophosphate Flame Retardants: A DFT Investigation on TCPP

Chao Li; Jingwen Chen; Hong-Bin Xie; Yuanhui Zhao; Deming Xia; Tong Xu; Xuehua Li; Xianliang Qiao

Tris(2-chloroisopropyl) phosphate (TCPP), a widely used organophosphate flame retardant, has been recognized as an important atmospheric pollutant. It is notable that TCPP has potential for long-range atmospheric transport. However, its atmospheric fate is unknown, restricting its environmental risk assessment. Herein we performed quantum chemical calculations to investigate the atmospheric transformation mechanisms and kinetics of TCPP initiated by ·OH in the presence of O2/NO/NO2, and the effects of ubiquitous water on these reactions. Results show the H-abstraction pathways are the most favorable for the titled reaction. The calculated gaseous rate constant and lifetime at 298 K are 1.7 × 10-10 cm3molecule-1 s-1 and 1.7 h, respectively. However, when considering atmospheric water, the corresponding lifetime is about 0.5-20.2 days. This study reveals for the first time that water has a negative role in the ·OH-initiated degradation of TCPP by modifying the stabilities of prereactive complexes and transition states via forming hydrogen bonds, which unveils one underlying mechanism for the observed persistence of TCPP in the atmosphere. Water also influences secondary reaction pathways of selected TCPP radicals formed from the primary H-abstraction. These results demonstrate the importance of water in the evaluation of the atmospheric fate of newly synthesized chemicals and emerging pollutants.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

CO2 Absorption in an Alcoholic Solution of Heavily Hindered Alkanolamine: Reaction Mechanism of 2-(tert-Butylamino)ethanol with CO2 Revisited.

Hong-Bin Xie; Xiaoxuan Wei; Pan Wang; Ning He; Jingwen Chen

To advance the optimal design of amines for postcombustion CO2 capture, a sound mechanistic understanding of the chemical process of amines with good CO2 capture performance is advantageous. A sterically hindered alkanolamine, 2-(tert-butylamino)ethanol (TBAE), in ethylene glycol (EG) solution was recently reported to have better CO2 capture performance and unusual reactivity toward CO2, in comparison with those of the prototypical alkanolamines. However, the reaction mechanism of TBAE with CO2 in EG solution is unclear. Here, various quantum chemistry methods were employed to probe the reaction mechanism of TBAE with CO2 in EG and aqueous solution. Six reaction pathways involving three kinds of possible reactive centers of TBAE solution were considered. The results indicated that the formation of anionic hydroxyethyl carbonate by the attack of -OH of EG on CO2 is the most favorable, which is confirmed by complementary high-resolution mass spectrum experiments. This clarified that the speculated zwitterionic carbonate species is not the main product in EG solution. The reaction process of TBAE in aqueous solution is similar to that in EG solution, leading to bicarbonate, which agrees with experimental observations. On the basis of the unveiled reaction mechanisms of TBAE + CO2, the role of the key tert-butyl functional group of TBAE was revealed.


Chemosphere | 2015

Transformation pathways of MeO-PBDEs catalyzed by active center of P450 enzymes: A DFT investigation employing 6-MeO-BDE-47 as a case

Xingbao Wang; Jingwen Chen; Yong Wang; Hong-Bin Xie; Zhiqiang Fu

Recent in vivo and in vitro experiments indicated that methoxylated polybrominated diphenyl ethers (MeO-PBDEs) can be biotransformed into hydroxylated PBDEs (HO-PBDEs) that are more toxic than PBDEs and MeO-PBDEs. Nevertheless, the enzymatic transformation mechanism is not clear. We hypothesized that cytochrome P450 enzymes (CYPs) play a key role in the transformation and employed the density functional theory calculations to unveil the mechanism. The transformation of a model compound, 6-MeO-BDE-47, catalyzed by the active center of CYPs (Compound I), was computed. For the first time, our results show that the energy barriers for the addition of Compound I to the C atoms on the phenyl of 6-MeO-BDE-47 are much higher than that for hydroxylation of the methoxyl, indicating that O-demethylation is a dominating metabolic pathway. This is in line with experimental observations performed by others. The pathways for the transformation of 6-MeO-BDE-47 catalyzed by Compound I were clarified. A C-H bond of the methoxyl is activated by Compound I, followed by radical rebound to form carbinol intermediates, then the carbinols decompose to form 6-HO-BDE-47 with the assistance of water molecules. The computational method can be potentially employed to develop models that predict biotransformation of xenobiotics catalyzed by CYPs.

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Jingwen Chen

Dalian University of Technology

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Fangfang Ma

Dalian University of Technology

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Chao Li

Northeast Normal University

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Qi Yu

Dalian University of Technology

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Zhiqiang Fu

Dalian University of Technology

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Pu Ge

Dalian University of Technology

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Yi Luo

Dalian University of Technology

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Xianliang Qiao

Dalian University of Technology

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Xiaoxuan Wei

Dalian University of Technology

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Xuehua Li

Dalian University of Technology

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