{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Enhanced Fenton-like catalysis via interfacial regulation of g-C3N4 for efficient aromatic organic pollutant degradation. {Author}: Zhou B;Liu Q;Zheng C;Ge Y;Huang L;Fu H;Fang S; {Journal}: Environ Pollut {Volume}: 356 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Sep 1 {Factor}: 9.988 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.envpol.2024.124341 {Abstract}: For the efficient degradation of organic pollutants with the goal of reducing the water environment pollution, we employed an alkaline hydrothermal treatment on primeval g-C3N4 to synthesize a hydroxyl-grafted g-C3N4 (CN-0.5) material, from which we engineered a novel Fenton-like catalyst, known as Cu-CN-0.5. The introduction of numerous hydroxyl functional groups allowed the CN-0.5 substrate to stably fix active copper oxide particles through surface complexation, resulting in a low Cu leaching rate during a Cu-CN-0.5 Fenton-like process. A sequence of characterization techniques and theoretical calculations uncovered that interfacial complexation induced charge redistribution on the Cu-CN-0.5 surface. Specifically, some of the π electrons in the tris-s-triazine units were transferred to the copper oxide particles along the newly formed chemical bonds (C(π)-O-Cu), forming a π-deficient area on the tris-s-triazine plane near the complexation site. In a typical Cu-CN-0.5 Fenton-like process, a stable π-π interaction was established due to the favorable positive-negative match of electrostatic potential between the aromatic pollutants and π-deficient areas, leading to a significant improvement in Cu-CN-0.5's adsorption capacity for aromatic pollutants. Furthermore, pollutants also delivered electrons to the Cu-CN-0.5 Fenton-like system via a "through-space" approach, which suppressed the futile oxidation of H2O2 in reducing the high-valent Cu2+ and significantly improved the generation efficiency of •OH with high oxidative capacity. As expected, Cu-CN-0.5 not only exhibited an efficient Fenton degradation for several typical aromatic organic pollutants, but also demonstrated both a low metal leaching rate (0.12 mg/L) and a H2O2 utilization rate exceeding 80%. The distinctive Fenton degradation mechanism substantiated the potential of the as-prepared material for effective wastewater treatment applications.