The remediation of solutions contaminated with monochloroacetic acid (CAA), which is one of the most resistant haloacetic acids (HAAs) to chemical degradation, dramatically depends on the adopted electrochemical approach: (i) CAA is only poorly oxidized either by homogeneous hydroxyl radical in electro-Fenton (EF), electrogenerated active chlorine or electro-oxidation on Pt anode; (ii) it is moderately abated by direct reduction on silver or compact graphite cathodes (from 30% in macro cells to 60% in the microfluidic devices); (iii) it is quantitatively removed by direct electro-oxidation on a boron-doped diamond (BDD) anode. The use of a microreactor enables operation in the absence of supporting electrolyte and drastically enhances the performance of the cathodic process. Simultaneously performing direct oxidation on BDD and reduction on graphite in a microfluidic cell yields the fastest CAA removal with 100% abatement at low current densities (∼5 mA cm-2). © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.

Scialdone, O., Corrado, E., Galia, A., Sirés, I. (2014). Electrochemical processes in macro and microfluidic cells for the abatement of chloroacetic acid from water. ELECTROCHIMICA ACTA, 132, 15-24 [10.1016/j.electacta.2014.03.127].

Electrochemical processes in macro and microfluidic cells for the abatement of chloroacetic acid from water

SCIALDONE, Onofrio;GALIA, Alessandro;
2014-01-01

Abstract

The remediation of solutions contaminated with monochloroacetic acid (CAA), which is one of the most resistant haloacetic acids (HAAs) to chemical degradation, dramatically depends on the adopted electrochemical approach: (i) CAA is only poorly oxidized either by homogeneous hydroxyl radical in electro-Fenton (EF), electrogenerated active chlorine or electro-oxidation on Pt anode; (ii) it is moderately abated by direct reduction on silver or compact graphite cathodes (from 30% in macro cells to 60% in the microfluidic devices); (iii) it is quantitatively removed by direct electro-oxidation on a boron-doped diamond (BDD) anode. The use of a microreactor enables operation in the absence of supporting electrolyte and drastically enhances the performance of the cathodic process. Simultaneously performing direct oxidation on BDD and reduction on graphite in a microfluidic cell yields the fastest CAA removal with 100% abatement at low current densities (∼5 mA cm-2). © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.
2014
Scialdone, O., Corrado, E., Galia, A., Sirés, I. (2014). Electrochemical processes in macro and microfluidic cells for the abatement of chloroacetic acid from water. ELECTROCHIMICA ACTA, 132, 15-24 [10.1016/j.electacta.2014.03.127].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10447/98498
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