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Electrocatalytic Reduction of Nitrate Using Magnéli Phase TiO2 Reactive Electrochemical Membranes Doped with Pd-Based Catalysts.

Pralay GayenJason SpataroSumant AvasaralaAbdul-Mehdi AliJosée M CerratoBrian P Chaplin
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2018)
This research focused on synthesis, characterization, and application of point-of-use catalytic reactive electrochemical membranes (REMs) for electrocatalytic NO3- reduction. Deposition of Pd-Cu and Pd-In catalysts to the REMs produced catalytic REMs (i.e., Pd-Cu/REM and Pd-In/REM) that were active for NO3- reduction. Optimal performance was achieved with a Pd-Cu/REM and upstream counter electrode, which reduced NO3- from 1.0 mM to below the EPAs regulatory MCL (700 μM) in a single pass through the REM (residence time ∼2 s), obtaining product selectivity of <2% toward NO2-/NH3. Nitrate reduction was not affected by dissolved oxygen and carbonate species and only slightly decreased in a surface water sample due to Ca2+ and Mg2+ scaling. Energy consumption to treat surface water was 1.1 to 1.3 kWh mol-1 for 1 mM NO3- concentrations, and decreased to 0.19 and 0.12 kWh mol-1 for 10 and 100 mM NaNO3 solutions, respectively. Electrocatalytic reduction kinetics were shown to be an order of magnitude higher than catalytic NO3- reduction kinetics. Conversion of up to 67% of NO3-, with low NO2- (0.7-11 μM) and NH3 formation (<10 μM), and low energy consumption obtained in this study suggest that Pd-Cu/REMs are a promising technology for distributed water treatment.
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