Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6968077 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2018 | 33 Pages |
Abstract
Naturally occurring arsenic enrichment in aquifers posts a huge threat to drinking water safety. To achieve energy-efficient arsenite [As(III)] removal, a self-powered iron electrocoagulation was developed that coupled iron corrosion anode with oxygen reduction air cathode for simultaneous As(III) oxidation and removal. Activated carbon (AC), which favored the four-electron oxygen reduction reaction (ORR, O2+4eâ+4H+â2H2O, E0â² = 0.816â¯V), and carbon black (CB), which favored two-electron ORR (O2+2eâ+2H+âH2O2, E0â² = 0.283â¯V), were evaluated for As(III) removal efficiency and current production performance. The comparison showed a tradeoff between higher current (i.e., higher iron corrosion rate) attributed to the higher reduction potential with four-electron ORR, and higher H2O2 production for improved As(III) oxidation with two-electron ORR yet the lower reduction potential The CB cathode that favored H2O2 production had the best As(III) removal of 99.2â¯Â±â¯0.4% and the lowest maximum power density of 60â¯Â±â¯0.3â¯mW m-2, while the AC cathode showed the opposite trend. These results suggested that cathode catalysts need to be carefully evaluated for the balance of As(III) removal and current production to provide a sustainable and effective solution for groundwater As(III) removal.
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Authors
Yanxiao Si, Guanghe Li, Yue Wu, Hao Zhang, Ying Yuan, Haichuan Zhang, Bo Liu, Fang Zhang,