Oxidizing Capacity of Iron Electrocoagulation Systems for Refractory Organic Contaminants Transformation

2019 
Iron electrocoagulation (Fe EC) is normally considered as a separation process. Here, we found that Fe(II)–O2 interactions in Fe EC systems could produce reactive oxidants, mainly hydroxyl radicals (•OH), for refractory organic contaminant transformation. Production of reactive oxidants, probed by benzoate conversion to p-hydroxybenzoic acid (p-HBA), depended on dissolved oxygen (DO) concentration and Fe(II) speciation. Measurable levels of DO were required for significant p-HBA production. Fe precipitates evolved from lepidocrocite to magnetite when DO decreased to below the detection limit. Both experiments and kinetic modeling suggest that the main Fe(II) species contributing to reactive oxidants (mainly •OH) production changed from aqueous Fe(II) initially to lepidocrocite-sorbed Fe(II) with progressive precipitates formation. When DO was not measurable at high currents (≥50 mA or 100 mA/L), reactive oxidant production was ineffective because of pH rise and Fe(II) preservation in magnetite, but it cou...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    73
    References
    17
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []