An Electrochemical Strategy for Simultaneous Heavy Metal Complexes Wastewater Treatment and Resource Recovery.
Meiqi LiNa ChenHuan ShangCancan LingKai WeiShengxi ZhaoBiao ZhouFalong JiaZhihui AiLizhi ZhangPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2022)
Heavy metals chelated with coexisting organic ligands in wastewater impose severe risks to public health and the ambient ecosystem but are also valuable metal resources. For sustainable development goals, the treatment of heavy metal complexes wastewater requires simultaneous metal-organic bond destruction and metal resource recovery. In this study, we demonstrated that a neutral pH electro-Fenton (EF) system, which was composed of an iron anode, carbon cloth cathode, and sodium tetrapolyphosphate electrolyte (Na 6 TPP), could induce a successive single-electron activation pathway of molecular oxygen due to the formation of Fe(II)-TPP complexes. The boosted •OH generation in the Na 6 TPP-EF process could decomplex 99.9% of copper ethylene diamine tetraacetate within 8 h; meanwhile, the released Cu ions were in situ deposited on the carbon cloth cathode in the form of Cu nanoparticles with a high energy efficiency of 2.45 g kWh -1 . Impressively, the recovered Cu nanoparticles were of purity over 95.0%. More importantly, this neutral EF strategy could realize the simultaneous removal of Cu, Ni, and Cr complexes from real electroplating effluents. This study provides a promising neutral EF system for simultaneous heavy metal complexes wastewater treatment and resource recovery and sheds light on the importance of molecular oxygen activation in the field of pollutant control.
Keyphrases
- wastewater treatment
- heavy metals
- risk assessment
- antibiotic resistance genes
- health risk assessment
- public health
- health risk
- aqueous solution
- ion batteries
- metal organic framework
- sewage sludge
- human health
- reduced graphene oxide
- climate change
- particulate matter
- solar cells
- nitric oxide
- hydrogen peroxide
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- smoking cessation
- transition metal