Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
579566 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2010 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Incomplete oxidation of Fe(II) species released from the anode to Fe(III) may impede iron electrocoagulation processes conducted under low dissolved oxygen and/or pHÂ <Â 7 conditions, accompanied by the typically high buffering capacity of wastewater. This paper introduces a new approach to overcome this drawback by applying a second electrochemical cell (Ti/RuO2 anode and Ti cathode) to be operated in parallel to the electrocoagulation cell. The second unit oxidizes Clâ ions invariably present in the water to HOCl, which is capable of oxidizing Fe(II) species at a high rate, irrespective of pH or O2(aq) concentration. An electrolytic cell with a Ti/RuO2 anode and Ti cathode was shown to successively operate in parallel to a sacrificial electrocoagulation cell (Fe anode and Ti cathode) to attain complete Fe(II) conversion to Fe(III) under low-pH conditions, in which, in the absence of the 2nd cell, unwanted Fe(II) species would have dominated the dissolved iron species. Current efficiency for Cl2 production was 12.4% and 45.7% at 200 and 1000Â mg Cl/l, respectively. Under three practical conditions (pH 6, [Clâ]Â =Â 200Â mg/l; pH 6, [Clâ]Â =Â 400Â mg/l; pH 5, [Clâ]Â =Â 600Â mg/l) the power demand of the combined system was 25.29, 12.7 and 8.1Â kWh/kg Fe(III)produced, respectively, suggesting that the presented approach is competitive at [Clâ]Â >Â â¼600Â mg/l.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Health and Safety
Authors
Youri Gendel, Ori Lahav,