Faradic Porosity Cell
20200024158 ยท 2020-01-23
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C02F2103/32
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C02F2103/026
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C02F2103/002
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
Abstract
Applicant's faradic porosity cell combines adsorption (physical and capacitive) and faradic immobilization of a target species by optimizing electrode porosity, applied E, and Pourbaix operating regions. The optimization parameters are (i) physical adsorption; (ii) capacitive adsorption; (iii) electrochemical pH modulation; (iv) electrochemical peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2) generation; (v) electrodeposition (e.g., electroplating, electrophoretic deposition); (vi) electrochemical oxidation or reduction; (vii) precipitation; (viii) pore mouth diameter profile, and (ix) electrode spacing, and (xi) flow-by vs. flow-through vs. carbon block cell design.
Claims
1. An electrochemical device for purifying an aqueous solution, wherein at least one carbon-based anode and at least one carbon-based cathode (each such anode and cathode being a pristine electrode without E.sub.PZC shift) alternate within a container configured with at least one inlet that supplies an aqueous solution to the container, at least one outlet that discharges purified output from the container, a separator is disposed between each electrode, and a power supply with associated wiring provides a DC constant voltage or constant current to the carbon-based electrodes, wherein an aqueous solution containing at least one target species to be removed from the aqueous solution is admitted through the inlet, passes by or through the electrodes to a discharge channel that leads to the at least one outlet, and wherein the DC voltage applied to the at least one anode and the DC voltage applied to the at least one cathode are DC voltages associated with a Pourbaix diagram of the at least one target species at which the at least one target species is agglutinated on an electrode through a mechanism selected from the group consisting of capacitive adsorption, faradic immobilization, and both capacitive adsorption and faradic immobilization.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein the agglutination of the at least one target species is caused by oxidation of the target species in a pH region of <4 near the at least one anode.
3. The device of claim 1, wherein the agglutination of the at least one target species is caused by oxidation of the target species in a pH region of <4 near the at least one anode, wherein the oxidation arises from production of oxidizers in a pH region of >8 near the at least one cathode.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein the power supply is controlled by a process controller or manually.
5. The device of claim 1, wherein the material with which the electrodes are fabricated has high aqueous permeability and is selected from the group consisting of activated carbon cloth, a mixture of microporous and mesoporous activated carbon, a mixture of mesoporous and macroporous activated carbon, and a mixture of microporous, mesoporous, and macroporous activated carbon.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein the separator thickness is selected from the group consisting of a range of 1 nm to 100 microns, 2 nm to 50 microns, 2 nm to 30 microns, 1 to 100 microns, 1 to 50 microns, and 1 to 30 microns.
7. The device of claim 1, wherein the DC voltage used to achieve faradic immobilization is selected from the group consisting of less than 0.6 V, less than 1.2 V, and less than 2.5 V.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein the electrodes are separated by an impermeable insulator and wherein the through stream flows only through the porous electrode before reaching a discharge channel.
9. The device of claim 1, wherein the electrodes are separated by a permeable separator and wherein the through stream flows by the electrodes through the separator to the discharge channel.
10. The device of claim 1, wherein an ion-exchange membrane covers the at least one anode, the at least one cathode, or both electrodes.
11. The device of claim 1, wherein the electrical potential of zero charge of at least one carbon-based electrode has been shifted by a mechanism selected from the group consisting of reduction of a cathode, oxidation of a cathode, reduction of an anode, and oxidation of an anode.
12. The device of claim 1, wherein at least one carbon-based anode has an average pore mouth diameter selected from the group consisting of an average pore mouth diameter of 2.0 to 10 nm achieved with a pore mouth diameter profile from 0% to 30% microporous activated carbon and from 70% to 100% mesoporous activated carbon, wherein the microporous activated carbon comprises carbon with a conductivity value >10 S/cm, an average pore mouth diameter 2.5 to 10 nm achieved with a pore mouth diameter profile of 0% to 20% macroporous activated carbon and 80% to 100% mesoporous activated carbon with a conductivity value >10 S/cm,
13. The device of claim 1, wherein at least one carbon-based cathode has an average pore mouth diameter selected from the group consisting of an average pore mouth diameter of 2.0 to 10 nm achieved with a pore mouth diameter profile from 0% to 30% microporous activated carbon and from 70% to 100% mesoporous activated carbon, wherein the microporous activated carbon comprises carbon with a conductivity value >10 S/cm, an average pore mouth diameter 2.5 to 10 nm achieved with a pore mouth diameter profile of 0% to 20% macroporous activated carbon and 80% to 100% mesoporous activated carbon with a conductivity value >10 S/cm,
14. The device of claim 1, wherein the spacing between electrodes is selected from the group consisting of less than 1 mm, less than 200 microns, less than 50 microns, and less than 20 microns.
15. The device of claim 1, wherein the cell design is rolled, stacked, or carbon block.
16. The device of claim 1, wherein the average pore mouth distribution range is 0-50 nm, target species and FPC parameters are selected from the group consisting of: Manganese, with FPC parameters of anode voltage range of 0 to 1.2 V, cathode voltage of <1.1, and preferred operating voltage of 1.2 V; Iron, with FPC parameters of anode voltage range of 0 to 1.2 V, cathode voltage of <0.5 V, and preferred operating voltage range of 0.4 to 1.2 V; Cobalt, with FPC parameters of anode voltage range of >0 V and cathode voltage of <0.5 V; Nickel, with FPC parameters of anode voltage range of 0 to 1.0 V, cathode voltage of <0.4 V, and preferred operating voltage of 1.2 V; Copper with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0 V, cathode voltage of <0 V, and preferred operating voltage range of 0.8 to 1.2 V; Zinc, with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0 V, cathode voltage of <0.8V, and preferred operating voltage range of 0.8 to 1.2 V; Aluminum, with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0 V, cathode voltage of <1.3 V, and preferred operating voltage of 0.4 V; Lead, with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0.5 V, cathode voltage of <0.4 V, and preferred operating voltage of 1.2 V; Palladium, with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0 V and cathode voltage of <0 V; Silver, with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0 V and cathode of <0 V; Iridium, with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0.4 V and cathode voltage of <0 V; Platinum, with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0 V and cathode voltage of <0 V; Gold, with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0.8 V and cathode voltage of <0 V; Mercury, with FPC parameters of anode voltage of >0.3 V and cathode voltage of <0 V; Chlorine, with FPC parameters of an anode potential of <1.5 V vs. NHE and total cell potential of <2.5 V applied across anode and cathode; Bromine, with FPC parameters of an anode potential <1.2V vs. NHE, a cathode potential of >1.0V vs. NHE, and a total cell potential of <2.2 V applied across anode and cathode; and Chloramine, with FPC parameters of an anode potential <1.4V vs. NHE, a cathode potential of >1.0V vs. NHE, and a total cell potential of <2.4 V applied across anode and cathode.
17. A method of purifying an aqueous solution, wherein a faradic porosity cell configured with FPC parameters for a target species, has an input stream of solution to be purified and an output stream of purified water.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein the aqueous solution is selected from the group consisting of power plant wastewater, power plant cooling water, laundry wastewater, water to be purified for human consumption, water to be purified for agriculture, water to be purified for horticulture, water to be purified for use in food, water to be softened, sea water to be purified for human consumption, water to be purified for laboratory use, brackish water to be purified for human consumption or agriculture use, and water to be purified for medical use.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0125] To increase the efficiency of removal of metal and halide contaminants from water using an electrochemical device that typically operates under a constant applied potential, Applicant's combining of capacitive adsorption, faradic reactions near or on cell electrodes, and electrode pore mouth diameter profiling creates a new type of electrochemical device, the faradic porosity cell. The first consideration in a faradic porosity cell is the selection and use of carbon-based materials that can generate reactions and vary pH at both the anode (carbon oxidation with water) and the cathode (dissolved oxygen reduction) over long periods of time. Carbon materials with the right porosity and bulk materials properties can produce these reactions over extended time periods, which will enable targeted reactions with incoming constituents (target species) to be removed from an aqueous solution.
[0126] The next design consideration is spacing between the anode and the cathode. With decreased spacing, while maintaining electrical isolation between the electrodes, faster reaction rates are possible, which will limit the residence time needed for certain reaction and immobilization processes to be accomplished. Electrode spacing is typically less than 1 mm, and is preferably as close as possible without causing a short circuit of anode and cathode or causing an unacceptable pressure drop (the corollary of which is increased residence time and decreased flow rate) within the FPC. Preferable electrode spacing is less 1 mm, preferably less than 200 microns, more preferably less than 50 microns, and most preferably less than 20 microns.
[0127] Some species of a target species will adsorb by physical entrapment (physical adsorption) on, or by electrical attraction (capacitive adsorption) to, an electrode. Other species of a target species are starting materials for reactions (typically, oxidation) that create, directly or indirectly, new species of the target species that are immobilized on an electrode. Immobilization removes the target species from the solution. At a given spacing between the electrodes and matched carbon electrode materials properties, the potential applied to the anode and cathode are selected, based on the Pourbaix diagram of the target species in the input stream. Examples of FPC Parameters for various target species are shown in Table 1. For example, to remove copper, immobilization by plating on an electrode can occur at potentials ranging from 0.3 V to 0.4 V vs. NHE for pH regions from 0 to 14. In addition, precipitation can occur in the form of copper hydroxide (Cu(OH).sub.2) at the anode at potentials above 0 V vs. NHE and pH values higher than 4 (see
[0128] Other target species can be removed under similar mechanisms but under different voltage regions. For example, lead precipitation can occur from the pH and potentials that are generated on the electrode surfaces. At potentials more negative than 0.4 V vs. NHE and pH regions from 0 to 14, lead can be plated as a solid at the cathode. Precipitation at the anode can also occur as PbO.sub.2 if the pH is kept >1.5 and potentials >0.5 V vs. NHE are used (
[0129] Using the Pourbaix diagram for a material can define the pH and voltage needed in a faradaic porosity cell to remove target species of interest. A faradic porosity cell comprises a series of porous carbon anodes and cathodes, typically consisting of reduced cathodes (negative E.sub.PZC and positive surface charge) and pristine anodes (although anodes experience a positive E.sub.PZC shift ((negative surface charge)) during use), and operated by applying a small voltage, e.g., 1.2 V, across the electrodes. A schematic of an CCC embodiment of an FPC is shown in
[0130] A preferred average pore mouth diameter is in the range of 0.8 nm to 50 nm, and a more preferred average pore mouth diameter range is 2 nm to 20 nm. The applied potential causes redox reactions of the target species (e.g., plating, oxidation, reduction, peroxidation, etc.), and drives faradaic reactions on the carbon electrodes that will change the local pH regions at the anode (acidic) and cathode (basic). The combination of reactions of the target species and the change in pH is controlled by the applied potential. Applied E is typically at constant voltage and will reach a nearly constant current at steady state. Generally speaking, the applied voltage dictates which faradic reactions will occur within an FPC. An FPC will remove target species from a through stream without using treated (i.e., shifted E.sub.PZC) electrodes, but target species removal may be greater in certain water chemistries when using treated electrodes. If treated electrodes are used, the working voltage window (the potential difference between anode E.sub.PZC and cathode E.sub.PZC) is typically in the range if 0.3 V to 1.23 V.
[0131] The FPC invention combines adsorption (physical and capacitive) of target species (e.g., lead, iron, manganese, cadmium, chromium, chlorine, chloramine, etc.) and immobilization (aka coagulation) of the adsorbed target species by optimizing electrode porosity, applied E, and Pourbaix operating region. The optimization of (i) physical adsorption; (ii) capacitive adsorption; (iii) electrochemical pH modulation & target species immobilization; (iv) electrochemical peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2) generation; (v) electrodeposition (e.g., electroplating, electrophoretic deposition); (vi) electrochemical oxidation or reduction; (vii) precipitation; (viii) pore mouth diameter profile; (ix) electrode treatment, (x) electrode spacing, and (xi) flow-by vs. flow-through vs. carbon block cell design, depends upon target species, input stream water chemistry, and through stream water chemistry.
[0132] Reduction only occurs at the cathode of an FPC. Electrochemical reduction is usually described as an applied potential to the cell. The voltage distribution between anode and cathode occurs spontaneously based on the amount of applied voltage, the material properties of the electrodes, and the chemistry of the aqueous solution.
[0133] One embodiment of the invention is a capacitive coagulation system and method that uses one or more capacitive coagulation cells that remove metal ions or particulate metal for which a Pourbaix diagram exists, e.g. As, Se, Pb, Ni, Zn, Al, Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Y, Zr, Nb, Mo, Tc, Ru, Rh, Pd, Ag, Cd, La, Hf, Ta, W, Re, Os, Ir, Pt, Au, Hg, Ce, Pr, Nd, Pm, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, and Lu, from an input stream by one or more of the following methods, each of which is a CCC Parameter: (i) physical adsorption; (ii) capacitive adsorption; (iii) electrochemical pH modulation & metal immobilization; (iv) electrochemical peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2) generation & metal oxidation; (v) electrodeposition (e.g., electroplating, electrophoretic deposition); (vi) electrochemical oxidation or reduction; (vii) precipitation; (viii) pore mouth diameter profile; (ix) electrode treatment, (x) electrode spacing, and (xi) flow-by vs. flow-through vs. carbon block cell design. A CCC can remove lead from water to produce water with lead concentrations below the EPA action level of 15 ppb for potable or irrigation water.
[0134] Compared to prior art devices, Applicant's CCC has higher specificity for lead and other metals, removes both dissolved and particulate lead and other metals, has a device lifetime that can be measured in years rather than days or weeks, and uses low cost materials. Applicant's CCC achieves its longevity and efficiency by combining electrochemistry and carbon materials to provide a system that is not saturated, fouled, or inhibited by other constituents in the water such as iron, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), particulates, and natural organic matter (NOM). Applicant's device lifetime is multi-fold longer than the prior art technologies of carbon filtration, ion-exchange filtration, zeolite adsorbents, and reverse osmosis (RO).
[0135] Combining in a CCC an optimized PMD, applied E, chemical manipulations, and electrochemical manipulations facilitates immobilization (coagulation) of lead onto the carbon electrodes. The adsorbed lead is permanently removed from solution (
[0136] Metal speciation and chemistries can be exploited to selectively remove lead (and other target metals) from water with high efficacy and selectivity, regardless of water chemistry. Through this operation, Applicant's CCC (i) can electrochemically, chemically, and physically remove lead and other target species from drinking water sources, eliminating the need for multiple separation techniques that are currently necessary and driven by varying input stream conditions and pH, and (ii) solves the technical problem of providing a more efficient, less expensive, scalable device for purifying drinking water and process water, especially a device that removes soluble and insoluble lead to below 15 ppb. Adjustment of pH of an input stream may be necessary to improve agglutination of a target species, especially for removal of metals.
[0137] In an EDC embodiment of the FPC technology, the EDC Parameters are tuned to remove other non-metal target species, e.g., chlorine, chloramines, and other halides and halide derivatives, from the EDC influent. Tuning an EDC primarily means selecting (i) a voltage applied between EDC anodes and cathodes based on (ii) analyzing and selecting an operating region in the target species' Pourbaix diagram, and (iii) selecting a pore mouth diameter profile of the EDC carbon electrodes that maximizes removal of a target species. The effluent from an EDC can be used without further processing or can be routed to one or more EDCs, CCCs, or prior art water purification cells for further removal of other target species. Tuning can optionally be further optimized through electrode treatment. Device features and benefits are listed below and in Table 2 and Table 3 in the Drawings.
[0138] An EDC or CCC optionally uses treated anodes and cathodes made of carbon in which the one or both electrodes' Epzc has been shifted compared to a pristine electrode Epzc. Shifting the Epzc of an electrode can change the kinetics of reactions occurring (either positively or negatively). Whether to shift only anodes, or only cathodes, or both types of electrode, and how much Epzc shift to use, depends upon input water chemistry and the target species.
[0139] Carbon electrodes are superior to metal electrodes in avoiding or reducing electrolysis, or water splitting, when potentials as high as 3 V are applied to an electrode. An applied potential of more than 1.23 V (overpotential) can cause electrolysis of water, which produces dangerous hydrogen gas. Metal electrodes can cause hydrogen gas production at <2 V; in contrast, carbon electrodes can sustain higher applied voltages while avoiding substantive water electrolysis.
[0140] The inventive steps of an EDC are: (i) decreased power consumption required for reduction of chlorine and chloramines (responsible for taste and odor) through specific carbon electrodes and applied voltage, (ii) can be used on-demand or as continuous treatment, (iii) very scalable, simple design that provides significantly lower cost POU/POE devices as well as lower cost municipal, commercial, and industrial large-scale systems, (iv) similar performance to traditional carbon blocks (such as activated carbon/activated charcoal) but with significantly less carbon needed, (v) similar removal performance of free chlorine with a much shorter residence time, (vi) the use of less carbon, (vii) longer electrode life, especially for the removal of chlorine and chloramine, (viii) finer control over specific removal amounts and output water quality, (ix) better control over balancing rate of target species removal vs. electrode life, and (x) FPC cost/benefit can be adjusted by choice of carbon for FPC electrodes.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0141] During capacitive charging processes, a constant current or voltage is used to charge electrode surfaces for the purposes of energy storage, desalination, or other useful capacitive techniques. Charging and subsequent discharging of electrodes is often carried out for thousands of cycles over a range of voltages and currents, depending on the intended application. Carbon electrodes made of activated carbon are often employed for these capacitive-based charging and discharging processes due to (i) their high specific surface area and resulting high capacitance, and (ii) opportunities to add functional groups to effect surface modifications that improve, inter alia, metal and other target species removal, energy storage and deionization (e.g., desalination of seawater or brackish water). Activated carbon is a form of carbon processed to have numerous small, low-volume pores that increase the surface area available for adsorption or chemical reactions. An FPC can be used to purify wastewater, cooling water, laundry wastewater, water to be purified for human consumption, water to be purified for agriculture, water to be purified for horticulture, water to be purified for use in food, water to be softened, sea water to be purified for human consumption, water to be purified for laboratory use, brackish water to be purified for human consumption or agriculture use, and water to be purified for medical use.
[0142] The distribution of pore sizes in a carbon electrode is a critical FPC Parameter that has been overlooked in the prior art of water purification.
[0143] Electrode properties are shown in Table 4; the electrode suppliers are recited in the first column of Table 4. The pore size, or pore mouth diameter (PMD), is extremely important in terms of maintaining charge passed and is directly related to the lifetime of the EDC electrodes. PMD is customarily used as representative of the diameter of the associated pore channel within a carbon electrode.
[0144] In an FPC, a target species, if ionized, bearing an electrical charge, or bearing a partial charge due to the asymmetric distribution of electrons in chemical bonds, can be attracted to the carbon electrode due to the applied potential, which produces a driving force to move the target species close to (or in contact with) the carbon electrode. Non-ions and non-charged species of a target species can collide with an electrode surface. Once in contact with the electrode surface, numerous pathways to immobilization of the target species can occur. Local and large pH swings can be controlled to electrochemically produce an alkaline environment, which will produce, e.g., insoluble metal oxides, that precipitate near or on the electrodes and are entrapped in electrode pores. Faradic reactions, such as oxygen reduction reactions at the cathode, can produce hydrogen peroxide which can diffuse away from the electrode and oxidize target metal molecules that are within close proximity: hydrogen peroxide performs indiscriminate oxidation. When target species closer to the electrode are in a localized higher concentration, the statistical chance for hydrogen peroxide to oxidize the target species is greater. Other faradic reactions, such as direct electron transfer (reduction or oxidation) between the target species and electrode can also occur. Once the target species has been attracted to the electrode surface, the carbon electrode can (1) transfer an electron(s) from the electrode to the target species and reduce it so that it is deposited onto the electrode or (2) transfer an electron(s) from the target species to the carbon electrode and oxidize the target species into either an insoluble oxide or hydroxide, or into a more reactive species that can be immobilized through additional electron transfer reactions or pH adjustments. Precipitated species and electrically attracted species are entrapped in electrode pores.
[0145] The size and volume of actual pores in activated carbon depend upon the shape, tortuosity (which is usually associated with changes in pore diameter), and channel length of a given pore. Based on micrographs of activated charcoal, and depending on the activation and/or synthesis procedures, some pores in activated carbon can be tubular channels, polygonal channels, spheroid chambers, surface slits, etc. Channels and chambers can be dead end or through (i.e., a channel or chamber with two surface appearances, aka pore mouths, with channel continuity between the two pore mouths). Pores in activated carbon are generalized as being tubular channels that have an average pore channel diameter (hereinafter pore channel diameter) and an average pore mouth diameter. Measuring actual pore channel diameter of billions of pores that rarely have a constant pore channel diameter in a mass of activated carbon is a herculean task, and not reported here. As a generalization, the pore channel diameter is assumed to be identical to the pore mouth diameter.
[0146] The diameter of a pore mouth, i.e., the opening of a pore to electrolyte, has a major, and in small pore mouth diameters, predominant, impact on the utilization of that pore for adsorption and on multi-cycle performance in capacitive coagulation. A larger pore mouth diameter (and therefore, pore mouth surface area) will provide significant contact area between the pore channel and the electrolyte. A small pore mouth diameter will have more limited contact area (i.e., pore mouth surface area). Pore mouth diameters are defined by IUPAC as microporous, mesoporous, and macroporous with pore mouth diameters of <2 nm, 2-50 nm, and >50 nm, respectively. The lifetime of an adsorption medium has a direct correlation to the pore mouth diameter present on the surface of the material. The concept and ramifications of pore mouth roofing, aka pore mouth closure, after repeated cycles of adsorption and desorption using an activated carbon electrode, is explained below. A pore mouth roofs or closes, and a pore channel collapses, after repeated polarity reversal cycles of an FPC so that the surface area of the pore no longer functions effectively in entrapment and adsorption of target species.
[0147] Applicant's device incorporating capacitive coagulation technology removed soluble (dissolved) and insoluble (particulate) lead species from tap water to well below the EPA action level in samples spiked with concentrations up to 300 ppb lead. Efficient lead removal was even demonstrated with concentrations of lead as low 5 ppb in input streams, well below the action level. The prototype device achieved 90%, and frequently >99%, specificity for lead removal over other constituents commonly found in tap water, such as calcium (Ca.sup.2+). Applicant's capacitive coagulation invention was able to achieve this performance in hard, alkaline water where lead species tend to form complexation species that are difficult to remove by commercial off-the-shelf products. A CCC is also unexpectedly capable of removing both soluble (dissolved) and insoluble (particulate) lead, arsenic, nickel, and copper species.
[0148] Applicant's capacitive coagulation invention provides in one embodiment for lead removal a POU/POE water purification device capable of meeting NSF/ANSI 53 and 61 certifications at a minimum flow rate of 1 gallon per minute (gpm) regardless of input water source conditions: hardness, pH, alkalinity, and types of disinfection. Additionally, the device is (i) highly specific for target metals, e.g., arsenic, lead, nickel, copper, cadmium, lead, manganese, mercury, and radioactive metals, (ii) more reliable, (iii) more efficient, and (iv) lasts longer than state-of-the-art solutions. Applicant's capacitive coagulation cells provide a more efficient, less expensive, and very scalable water purification device that removes soluble and insoluble lead to below 15 ppb and is suitable for residential as well as scale-up to higher-throughput systems. A detailed Example below focuses on lead removal using capacitive coagulation cells, but adjustment of CCC parameters permit tuning of a CCC to remove any other metal or metal derivative for which a Pourbaix diagram exists, such as arsenic, cadmium, manganese, and mercury, as well as Se, Ni, Zn, Al, Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Y, Zr, Nb, Mo, Tc, Ru, Rh, Pd, Ag, Cd, La, Hf, Ta, W, Re, Os, Ir, Pt, Au, Ce, Pr, Nd, Pm, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, and Lu.
[0149] In a head-to-head comparison shown in
[0150] Soluble lead ions adsorb onto the carbon electrodes by physical and/or chemical adsorption, a process that is well documented (J. Chem. Technol. Biotechnol. 2002, 77, 458-464, Shekinah, P.; Kadirvelu, K.; Kanmani, P.; Senthilkumar, P.; Subburam, V. and Carbon. 2004, 42, 3057-3069, Swiatkowski, A.; Pakula, M.; Biniak, S.; Walczyk, M.), and undergo additional electro-adsorption onto the cathode under an applied potential. Modulation of the pH can also be exploited to control lead speciation in tap water. At an operating voltage of 1.2 V (as shown in
[0151] Multiple mechanisms of action occur simultaneously for lead removal during operation in a CCC: physical and electrochemical adsorption, pH modulation yielding acid/base chemistry, and electrochemical/chemical oxidation generating lead oxides and other insoluble species. The effect of applied potential and H.sub.2O.sub.2 generation on lead removal from tap water was verified by experimental data. As shown in Table 5, there is some physical adsorption of lead with the carbon electrodes at open circuit. At short-circuit there is a slight improvement in lead removal, but the most dramatic result occurs at an applied voltage of 1.2 V, where the lead concentration drops to nearly 0 ppb. Feed is the input stream, and treated is the output stream, in the CCCs used in the experiments.
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[0153] In an EDC, a cascading series of chemical-electrochemical-chemical-electrochemical reactions are occurring to decompose free chlorine and chloramine. The pH and operating voltage are correlated through the Pourbaix diagram for a target species. Examples are given below for hypochlorite, hypobromite, and monochloramine and shown in
[0154] With reference to
[0155] With reference to
[0156] With reference to
[0157] EDCs typically operate with total cell potential of <3.0 V applied across anode and cathode; depending upon target species and input water chemistry, total cell potential of <3.0 V applied across anode and cathode in an EDC is usually between 1.0 V to 3.0 V.
[0158] As shown in
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[0160] Accelerated oxidation studies, shown in
[0161] A bench-scale CCC system is shown in
[0162] The removal selectivity of dissolved lead was consistently 99% compared to Ca.sup.2+ for the treatment of a consecutive 5 gallons of tap water with concentrations as high as 10 ppm lead (Table 6), as confirmed by ICP-MS and calculated as percent removal of species. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) analyses of the electrodes after filtration confirmed lead immobilization are shown in
[0163] To further study the effect of applied potential on lead removal, tap water spiked with lead was filtered with a packed column filled with activated carbon at no applied potential (passive filtration/physical adsorption) and compared to CCCs operated at 1.2 V (active filtration/capacitive coagulation). The same amount of carbon and flow rate was used for both experiments. Breakthrough curves for these studies are shown in
[0164] Additionally, the dissolved oxygen (DO) dropped to 10% of saturation, equating to <1 ppm DO, and 1.25 ppm of H.sub.2O.sub.2 was measured after filtration at an applied potential of 1.2 V (
[0165] To test the limitations of Applicant's CCC device, tap water with lead concentrations as low as 5 ppb and as high as 10,000 ppb were processed through CCCs. Lead was successfully removed in all cases at an applied voltage of 1.2 V (Table 7). Even at highly dilute conditions where passive filtration consisting of equilibrium-based adsorption struggle, the capacitive coagulation's active filtration process excels with a selectivity of 99% (Table 6).
TABLE-US-00001 Key CCC device performance improvements over prior art devices: 99.9% lead removal 99% selectivity maintained down to ~5 ppb lead Active lead filtration system developed (capacitive coagulation) Permanent lead removal
[0166] Higher throughput CCC systems are fabricated by adding more capacitive coagulation cells and/or using larger electrodes in each cell. Such larger systems provide lead removal efficacy from 150 ppb to 10 ppb at a flow rate of 1 gpm or higher.
[0167] The preferred applied E for removal of Al, Ag, Au, Br, Cl, Co, Cu, Fe, Hg, Ir, Mn, Pb, Pd, Pt, Ni, Zn, and chloramine using an FPC are shown in Table 1.
[0168] CCC systems remove lead to below EPA action levels even if the input stream has various combinations of lead content, water hardness, alkalinity, disinfectants, and pH. Water chemistry will impact lead speciation (e.g., day to day variations in municipal water chemistry, the effect of which are shown in
[0169] Different operating parameters were explored depending on the water type. Corrosion of internal materials is a common concern with electrochemical-based systems, however little evidence of corrosion has been observed in FPC systems; internal components are designed, and the material is chosen, to be extremely robust, stable, and inert to galvanic and chemical corrosion. In one embodiment of the invention, if lead is found to leach after on/off operation or from the addition of chloramines, the FPC system can be designed to switch to open circuit or a small potential when not in use, and an inexpensive carbon block pre-filter is added to remove chloramines. An optional post-filter is added if small pieces of the carbon cloth are found to flake off over time.
[0170] Operational adjustments for specific water chemistries. Analysis of typical input stream feeding a given FPC device permits adjustments to optimize operating parameters for specific water chemistries (adjustments are to optimize physical and electrochemical adsorption of lead, pH modulations, and oxidation to lead oxides and other insoluble species). Typical operating parameters are adjusted as follows:
[0171] Operating voltage. To obtain the potential distribution, a three-electrode set-up is used with a cathode, anode, and a standard calomel electrode (SCE) as the reference. The potential at each electrode is recorded at open circuit, short-circuit, and up to a voltage of 1.4 V with 0.2 V increments. The pH and operating voltage are correlated through the Pourbaix diagram. Based on the pH and potential distributions at each electrode, the lead speciation can be controlled by selecting what voltage to apply. This calibration process determines and controls what lead species precipitate at what voltage and in a given input stream water chemistry.
[0172] Oxygen reduction and H.sub.2O.sub.2 generation. Oxygen reduction at the cathode generates H.sub.2O.sub.2 that can react with lead species to facilitate the formation of lead oxides. There is a significant reduction in DO at an applied voltage of 1.2 V and measured 1.25 ppm H.sub.2O.sub.2 in the filtered water. The operating voltage is controlled to amplify this reaction for maximal lead removal. Experiments conducted at open circuit, short-circuit, and up to a voltage of 1.4 V with 0.2 V increments, and the pH, DO, and H.sub.2O.sub.2 concentrations at the outlet typically remove lead to below EPA action levels.
[0173] Carbon conductivity. FPC devices typically use a microporous carbon with a moderate conductivity (carbon B in Table 8). A comparative study of carbons with different properties, Table 8, was conducted to elucidate their effect on lead removal via capacitive coagulation.
[0174] The CCC lead removal technology relies on (i) physical adsorption; (ii) capacitive adsorption; (iii) electrochemical pH modulation and metal immobilization; (iv) electrochemical peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2) generation & metal oxidation; (v) electrodeposition (e.g., electroplating, electrophoretic deposition); (vi) electrochemical oxidation; (vii) precipitation; (viii) pore mouth diameter profile, (ix) electrode treatment, (x) electrode spacing, and (xi) flow-by vs. flow-through vs. carbon block cell design. A combination of these factors, or a cascade of these factors, causes speciation and immobilization of target species that become trapped in the pore network of the carbon electrodes, which results in a purified effluent. It is imperative that the carbon electrodes are conductive. The more conductive the carbon material, the more uniform the current distribution was across the electrodes, which typically results in increased H.sub.2O.sub.2 generation and a more efficient lead removal process. The pore size and surface area are related to the adsorption capacity and tortuosity of the material. Pore size and surface area also affect H.sub.2O.sub.2 generation in an FPC device.
[0175] POU/POE device design. A POU/POE FPC product design parameters include: (1) Residence time and size of device was identified to achieve a flow rate of 1.5 gpm; and (2) Effective lead removal, defined by a reduction in dissolved lead levels from 150 ppb to 10 ppb and removal selectivity >90% over non-metal divalent ions, at 1.5 gpm for at least 150 gallons of water treated.
[0176] Residence time of the water: The residence time is a measure of the average time a volume of water remains in the device (volume/flow rate). In other words, it is the time required to filter a given amount of water. The internal volume of the device and flow rate dictates the residence time. In the bench-scale CCC device, at a flow rate of 20 ml/min, a residence time of 5 min typically gives the desired removal. The residence time for the flow rate at which the performance reaches a peak is selected as the design specification and the device is sized appropriately.
[0177] Pressure drop: The pressure drop across a FPC device is increasingly important as the flow rate increases. A pressure drop of <20 psi is considered acceptable and is below a normal inlet water pressure for residential and municipal buildings of 45 psi.
[0178] Ultimate capacity of a FPC device. For NSF/ANSI certification, the lead concentration must be reduced from 150 to 10 ppb, and POU systems on the market are rated to treat up to 120 gallons of water. This translates into 1 gallon of water treated per gram of carbon for a pitcher system and 1.6 gallons of water treated per gram of carbon for an under-the-sink system. One embodiment of the CCC device can treat 2 gallons of water at 1.5 gpm to bring lead levels from 150 ppb to 10 ppb. Ultimate capacity of the system is obtained from a lead removal curve. Pressure drop issues typically arise after >1 g of lead removal per gram of FPC carbon electrode. CCC embodiments for POU/POE use can include a lead sensor and/or pressure drop sensor to alert a user to replace the device.
[0179] FPC replacement threshold ranges for various embodiments. In general, a CCC is replaced when the target metal concentration in the output stream exceeds the relevant threshold level, e.g., 15 ppb for lead concentration and 1.3 ppm for copper (see the Lead and Copper Rule, a regulation published by the EPA in 1991 (https://www.epa.gov/ground-water-and-drinking-water/national-primary-drinking-water-regulations). The threshold level (aka sorption capacity) could be specified by a government agency, or user selected. Municipal and industrial wastewater discharge limits are different from drinking water limits; the metal concentration thresholds are typically higher. There are effluent guidelines for different industries (https://www.epa.gov/eg).
[0180] FPC Regeneration. When a FPC output stream metal concentration equals or exceeds the threshold level, rather than replacing the FPC, some types of FPCs can be regenerated (e.g., in a CCC, the adsorbed metal ions and particles desorbed (removed) from the CCC electrodes). One method of CCC regeneration is by flushing acid through the cell to dissolve coagulated metals and regenerate the electrodes. During this acid regeneration step, the output stream is diverted to a receptacle in which the highly concentrated waste stream is collected for other processing. After an acid regeneration step, the CCC is flushed with water until the output stream reaches pH 7 (or other target pH) before normal CCC operation (i.e., removal of metal ions and particles from the through stream) is resumed. Another method of CCC regeneration is by electrolysis or electrochemical regeneration in an acidic solution; electrolysis (aka electrochemical) regeneration converts metal oxides to soluble metal ions, which are then flushed out of the CCC with water and collected in a waste receptacle. Electrolysis is an electrochemical reaction that requires the application of an external voltage to drive a reaction that is non-spontaneous. Any insoluble metal species that have formed on the electrodes can be dissolved into solution using a small voltage, typically up to 5 V, applied across the CCC. CCC regeneration can also be a sequence of acid regeneration followed by electrolysis, or vice versa.
[0181] Multiple FPCs, in series, each of which FPCs targets the same or a different species. Multiple FPCs connected in series (outlet to inlet) tuned to remove the same target species act to successively reduce the concentration of the target species in a single pass of an input stream through the FPCs connected in series (accomplishing the same level of target species removal as operating a single cell in batch mode multiple times). Adjustment of FPC Parameters, e.g., pH of the through stream and voltage applied to the cell electrodes of a given cell, of multiple cells connected in series to different FPC Parameters and EDC Parameters, as the case may be, enable each cell in a series to remove a different target species from the through stream in a single pass. Pourbaix diagrams, which show the speciation of a target species at a given voltage and pH, best illustrate the cell series concept. Pourbaix diagrams for lead (
[0182] Applied voltage and electrochemical pH modulation are selected to remove target species of Ni, Fe, Mn, Al, and Zn from CCC influent using the Pourbaix diagrams shown in
[0183] FPC control system. FPC Parameters for a given FPC are monitored and controlled using a computer system that monitors and/or controls various sensors, interfaces, valves, and peripheral equipment, and is commonly known as a process control computer (aka processs controller), a computer generally associated with continuous or semi-continuous production operations involving materials such as chemicals and petroleum, whether in liquid, solid, or gas phases. The process control computer enables FPC Parameters to be applied to one or more FPCs in a system and changes in through-stream routing, e.g, changes that convert a series system architecture to a series-parallel system architecture.
[0184] Extension of FPC design to other target species for which Pourbaix diagrams exist. In addition to Pb, Ni, Zn, Al, Cu, Fe, Mn, Cl, Br, and chloramine, the FPC Parameters, and the system and methods disclosed above, can be applied to remove a metal and halide species identified in the Pourbaix diagrams for As, Se, Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Co, Y, Zr, Nb, Mo, Tc, Ru, Rh, Pd, Ag, Cd, La, Hf, Ta, W, Re, Os, Ir, Pt, Au, Hg, Ce, Pr, Nd, Pm, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu, and other halides.
EXAMPLES
[0185] Performance tests of EDCs were conducted to verify removal of total chlorine, free chlorine, chloramine, and peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2) using carbon electrodes and voltages of <3.0 V. Measurements were made using analytical test kits. Experiments were conducted with a flow-by cell design and 14 pairs of electrodes in an alternating series of anode-cathode-anode-cathode (variable number of repeats of anode-cathode) anode-cathode (
[0186] Capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Cu removal using 16 pairs of carbon electrodes (13 g of carbon), in which the cathodes were pristine SC and the anodes were nitric acid oxidized SC. The FPC was operated at short-circuit (0 V). A 1 L feed solution of 100 ppm Cu [Cu(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in direct injection (DI) H.sub.2O was treated at a flow rate of 20 ml/min. Samples were analyzed by inductively coupled plasma (ICP) with optical emission spectrometer (OES) and the results in Table 9 show that approximately 1/3 of the Cu was removed in a single pass.
[0187] Capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Cu removal using 12 pairs of carbon electrodes (10 g of carbon), in which the cathodes and anodes were both pristine SC. The FPC was operated at an applied potential of 1.2 V on the cathode. A 18.5 L feed solution of 50 ppm Cu [Cu(NO.sub.3).sub.2] and 50 ppm Ca (CaCl.sub.2) in DI H.sub.2O was treated at a flow rate of 20 ml/min. During operation Cu plated out of solution onto the cathode, shown as a grayish deposit in
[0188] Flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Cu removal using 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g of carbon), in which the cathodes were nitric acid oxidized KN and the anodes were pristine carbon. The FPC was operated at applied potentials of 0.8, 1.0, and 1.2 V. A 1.5 L feed solution of 2 ppm Cu [Cu(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O was treated at a flow rate of 100 mL/min. Samples were taken before and after filtration with the cell and the Cu.sup.2+ concentration measured with ICP-OES. 78% Cu removal was achieved at all conditions tested (Table 10).
[0189] Flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Cu removal at low pH using 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g of carbon), in which the cathodes were nitric acid oxidized KN and the anodes were pristine carbon. The FPC was operated at 1.2 V. A 1.5 L feed solution of 10 ppm Cu [Cu(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O was treated at a flow rate of 100 mL/min. The pH was adjusted to 2.8 using concentrated H.sub.2SO.sub.4. Samples were taken before and after filtration with the cell and the Cu.sup.2+ concentration measured with ICP-OES. Cu was very effectively removed (Table 11), with a removal of 99.8%.
[0190] Flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Ni removal using 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g of carbon), in which the cathodes were nitric acid oxidized KN and the anodes were pristine carbon. The FPC was operated at applied potentials of 0.8, 1.0, and 1.2 V. A 1.5 L feed solution of 50 ppm Ni [Ni(Cl).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O was treated at a flow rate of 100 mL/min. Samples were taken before and after filtration with the cell and the Ni.sup.2+ concentration measured with ICP-OES. The highest removal of 63% was achieved at 1.2 V (Table 12).
[0191] Capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Fe removal using 16 pairs of carbon electrodes (14 g of carbon), in which the cathodes were pristine SC and the anodes were nitric acid oxidized SC. The cell was operated at short-circuit (0 V). A 18.5 L feed solution of 100 ppm Fe [Fe(Cl).sub.3] or 25 ppm FeCl.sub.3 in DI H.sub.2O was treated at a flow rate of 20 ml/min. The concentration of Fe steadily decreased with treatment, ICP-OES results are shown in Table 13. For the higher concentration experiment (100 ppm Fe), Fe-oxides formed at the cathode as rust-colored precipitates on the separators, shown as a grayish deposit (
[0192] Flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Fe removal using 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g of carbon), in which the cathodes were nitric acid oxidized KN and the anodes were pristine carbon. The FPC was operated at applied potentials of 0.8, 1.0, and 1.2 V. A 1.5 L feed solution of 15 ppm Fe [Fe(Cl).sub.3] in tap H.sub.2O was treated at a flow rate of 100 mL/min. Samples were taken before and after filtration with the cell and the Fe.sup.3+ concentration measured with ICP-OES. 99.9% Fe removal was achieved at all conditions tested (Table 14).
[0193] Flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Mn removal using 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g of carbon), in which the cathodes were nitric acid oxidized KN and the anodes were pristine carbon. The FPC was operated at applied potentials of 0.8, 1.0, and 1.2 V. A 1.5 L feed solution of 20 ppm Mn [Mn(SO.sub.4)] in tap H.sub.2O was treated at a flow rate of 100 mL/min. Samples were taken before and after filtration with the cell and the Mn.sup.2+ concentration measured with ICP-OES. 99.8% Mn removal was achieved at 1.2 V (Table 15).
[0194] Flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Al removal using 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g of carbon), in which the cathodes were nitric acid oxidized KN and the anodes were pristine carbon. The FPC was operated at applied potentials of 0.4, 0.8, and 1.2 V. A 1.5 L feed solution of 30 ppm Al from a wastewater sample was treated at a flow rate of 100 mL/min. Samples were taken before and after filtration with the cell and the Al.sup.3+ concentration measured with ICP-OES. 99.9% Al removal was achieved at 0.4 V (Table 16).
[0195] Flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments were conducted to test Zn removal using 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g of carbon), in which the cathodes were nitric acid oxidized KN and the anodes were pristine carbon. The FPC was operated at applied potentials of 0.4, 0.8, and 1.2 V. A 1.5 L feed solution of 35 ppm Zn [Zn(Cl.sub.2)] in tap H.sub.2O was treated at a flow rate of 100 mL/min. Samples were taken before and after filtration with the cell and the Zn.sup.2+ concentration measured with ICP-OES. 40.8% Zn removal was achieved at 1.2 V (Table 17).
[0196] To study the physical adsorption of Pb on pristine and oxidized Kynol, packed columns were filled with 5 g of carbon and 1 L of 100 ppm Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in DI H.sub.2O was filtered at a flow rate of 20 mL/min. The results in Table 18 provide evidence that Pb is physically adsorbing to the carbon. Additionally, there was considerable white precipitate on the pristine Kynol electrodes after filtration (
[0197] Flow-through capacitive coagulation experiments with a 1 L feed solution of 50 ppb Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O, 12 pairs of pristine carbon electrodes (10 g), and a flow rate of 20 mL/min, showed Pb removal to well below the federal action level of 15 ppb in a single pass (Table 19 and Table 20). The cell was operated at short-circuit (0 V) and an applied potential of 0.8 and 1.2 V. Pb was spiked in several times to test removal. The experiments in Table 20 were performed with pristine anodes and nitric acid oxidized cathodes at 1.2 V. Samples were taken before and after filtration through the cell and the P.sup.2+ concentration measured with a handheld sensor from ANDalyze and/or inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP-MS). \ in the Tables means not measured.
[0198] Flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments with 1.5 L feed solutions of 5 to 275 ppb Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O, 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g), pristine anodes and nitric acid oxidized cathodes, and a flow rate of 100 mL/min, also showed Pb removal to well below the federal action level of 15 ppb in a single pass (Table 21) The cell was operated at an applied potential of 1.2 V. Samples were taken before and after filtration with the cell and the Pb.sup.2+ concentration measured with a handheld sensor from ANDalyze and/or ICP-MS. From the results it was made clear that Pb was being permanently removed from solution.
[0199] Flow-through capacitive coagulation experiments with a 1 L feed solution of 50 ppb Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O, 12 pairs of carbon electrodes (10 g), and a flow rate of 20 mL/min were carried out at open-circuit voltage (OCV), short-circuit (0 V), and applied potentials of 0.4 to 1.4 V with 0.2 V increments. Various oxygen-containing surface groups were tested, as well as carbons with differing properties. Samples were taken after a single pass through the cell and the Pb.sup.2+ concentration measured with a handheld sensor from ANDalyze and/or ICP-MS.
[0200] The experimental results in Table 22 are for pristine anodes and citric acid oxidized cathodes. Pb was removed at OCV and short-circuit, but was more effectively removed under applied potential. The best result was obtained at 1.2 V, where 92% of the Pb was removed.
[0201] The experimental results in Table 23 are for pristine anodes and nitric acid oxidized cathodes. The measured concentrations of Pb are below the spiked value of 50 ppb. The pH was close to 9 and there was likely insoluble Pb species not being accounted for in the measurement. An orange precipitate was also observed on the last pristine piece of carbon (anode), visible on the perimeter of the filter paper.
[0202] The experimental results in Table 24 are for pristine anodes and oven oxidized cathodes at 340 C. for 72 h. Pb removal was observed at short-circuit and 1.2 V. The dissolved oxygen (DO) was also monitored throughout the experiment and decreased with applied voltage, suggesting that oxygen is being reduced to H.sub.2O.sub.2 (Table 25).
[0203] Three carbons were tested: Kynol, Zorflex, and Fuel Cell Earth. Their properties are listed in Table 26. Results using Zorflex are shown in Table 27 and Table 28. The DO decreased and lead removal improved with applied voltage.
[0204] Results using Kynol are shown in Table 18-Table 24, as well as below in Table 29, Table 32 and Table 36. For the results shown in Table 29 only OCV, short-circuit, and an applied potential of 1.2 V were tested. Lead removal to very low levels even at a starting concentration of 10 ppb was achieved, and the DO concentration dropped to below 6% at 1.2 V. SEM/EDX confirmed Pb deposits on the electrodes (
[0205] Fuel Cell Earth (www.fuelcellstore.com) is a graphitic cloth and is highly conductive. Results are shown in Table 30 and Table 31. There was no measurable current in either case, owing to its very low surface area. When the cell was taken apart after the first experiment (Table 30) there was orange precipitate on all filter paper, regardless of location in the cell. The experiment was repeated with pristine carbon for both the anode and cathode, and samples were taken after 3 h of cycling as opposed to a single pass (Table 31). In this case there was no lead removal at open circuit, some at short-circuit, and much more at an applied potential of 1.2 V. The DO remained unchanged regardless of applied potential, and H.sub.2O.sub.2 was measured to be 0 ppm at 1.2 V. Pb removal is likely occurring due to pH swings at the electrode surface and not by reacting with H.sub.2O.sub.2.
[0206] The same series of experiments as described above was conducted with Pb spiked into synthetic tap water (Table 32 and Table 33 This water did not contain any carbonates and had a similar concentration of other ionic species in our tap water. Pb removal was observed at OCV and short-circuit, with slightly more removal at 1.2 V. The DO concentration was low throughout the experiment.
[0207] Breakthrough curves were obtained for packed columns of pristine or nitric acid oxidized carbon (5 g) and 1 L of 150 ppb Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2 tap H.sub.2O was filtered at a flow rate of 20 mL/min (Table 34 and Table 35). In this case, Pb removal is occurring via physical adsorption (passive filtration) as opposed to capacitive adsorption and coagulation (active filtration) with our device. The initial Pb concentration decreases dramatically, but both carbons saturate quickly at 0.3 L of water treated and become ineffective. Pristine carbon appears to be more effective for physical adsorption of lead as compared to oxidized carbon at the conditions tested. To determine when a flow-through embodiment of a FPC device becomes saturated, 5 gallons of water were treated at 1.2 V in a single pass with 12 pairs of electrodes (10 g) at 20 mL/min. Sustained performance for 5 gallons of water treated was obtained (Table 36). The concentration of lead remained low after filtration, whereas the concentration of calcium (Ca.sup.2+) was approximately constant, demonstrating a selectivity >99% for lead. This experiment was repeated with a flow-by device where 5 gallons of water were treated at 1.2 V in a single pass with 14 pairs of electrodes (30 g) at 100 mL/min (Table 37). Pb removal was maintained for the total volume passed, even from an extremely high starting Pb concentration.
[0208] A flow-by capacitive coagulation experiment with a 1.5 L feed solution of 150 ppb Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O, 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g), and a flow rate of 300 mL/min was carried out at and applied potential 1.2 V (Table 38). Samples were taken before and after a single pass through the cell and the Pb.sup.2+ concentration measured with a handheld sensor from ANDalyze. The treated sample was at the limit of detection of the sensor.
[0209] A flow-by capacitive coagulation experiment with a 1.5 L feed solution of 150 ppb Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O at a pH of 2.83, adjusted with concentrated H.sub.2SO.sub.4, 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g), and a flow rate of 100 mL/min was carried out at and applied potential 1.2 V (Table 39). Samples were taken before and after a single pass through the cell and the Pb.sup.2+ concentration measured with a handheld sensor from ANDalyze. The treated sample was below the limit of detection of the sensor.
[0210] A flow-by capacitive coagulation experiment with a 1.5 L feed solution of 150 ppb Pb in a Pb-acid battery manufacturer wastewater sample, 14 pairs of carbon electrodes (30 g), and a flow rate of 100 mL/min was carried out at and applied potential 1.2 V (Table 40). Samples were taken before and after a single pass through the cell and the Pb.sup.2+ concentration measured with a handheld sensor from ANDalyze. The effluent was well below the assigned Pb discharge limit of 0.6 ppm.
[0211] A rolled cell design was used for capacitive coagulation experiments with a 1.5 L feed solution of 150 ppb Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O, 14 g of carbon electrodes, pristine anodes and nitric acid oxidized cathodes, and flow rates of 50, 100 , and 200 mL/min, all showed Pb removal to below the federal action level of 15 ppb in a single pass (Table 41). The cell was operated at an applied potential of 1.2 V. Samples were taken before and after filtration with the cell and the Pb.sup.2+ concentration measured with a handheld sensor from ANDalyze.
[0212] A rolled cell design was used for capacitive coagulation experiments with a 1.5 L feed solution of 50 ppb Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] and 2.5 ppm Pb in tap H.sub.2O, as well as 10 ppm Cu in tap water. Pb removal was below the federal action level of 15 ppb for the lower concentration and <1 ppm for the higher concentration (Table 42). Cu removal was >99% (Table 43). A schematic of a rolled cell is shown in
[0213] A series cell architecture was used for capacitive coagulation experiments with a solution of 2.5 ppm Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O and 30 g of carbon electrodes at 1.2 V. A consecutive 5 gallons of water were treated and concentrations were consistently below 48 ppb (Table 44)
[0214] Carbon blocks were used for capacitive coagulation experiments with a 1.5 L feed solution of 50 ppb Pb [Pb(NO.sub.3).sub.2] in tap H.sub.2O (Table 45). Pb removal was below the federal action level of 15 ppb.
[0215] Industrial wastewater containing multiple metal species, Cu, Fe, and Mn, at concentrations in the ppm range was used for flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments. Flow rates of 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 L/min were tested at 1.2 V. Cu was reduced by >98%, Fe by >14%, and Mn by >87% (Table 46).
[0216] Reverse osmosis (RO) concentrate, or brine, containing multiple metal species, Cu, Fe, and Mn, at concentrations in the ppb range was used for flow-by capacitive coagulation experiments. Flow rates of 0.1, 0.5, and 1.0 L/min were tested at 1.2 V. Cu was reduced by >99%, Fe by >99%, and Mn by >74% (Table 47).
[0217] Total and free chlorine were measured before and after treatment with an EDC tuned for chlorine removal. Chloramine was estimated from the difference between total and free chlorine. Free chlorine removal of >99% and chloramine removal of up to 99% was obtained. A voltage <3.0 V was applied to the cell during operation. Flow rates of 100 to 500 ml/min were tested. A total of 210 gallons of water was treated before degradation in performance was observed, strictly due to charge loss from pore collapse.
[0218] Oxidized Kynol (nitric acid treatment) was used as the anode and pristine Kynol as the cathode when V>0; electrodes are switched when V<0. Total chlorine in the feed (influent) and product (effluent) streams is shown in
[0219] Oxidized Kynol (nitric acid treatment) was used as the cathode and Fuel Cell Earth as the anode. Total chlorine in the feed and product streams is shown in
[0220] Oxidized Calgon (nitric acid and electrochemical treatment) was used as the anode and pristine Calgon as the cathode when V>0; electrodes are switched when V<0. Total chlorine in the feed and product streams is shown in
SUMMARY
[0221] In summary, the FPC invention comprises an electrochemical device for purifying an aqueous solution, wherein at least one carbon-based anode and at least one carbon-based cathode (each such anode and cathode being a pristine electrode without Epzc shift) alternate within a container configured with at least one inlet that supplies an aqueous solution to the container, at least one outlet that discharges purified output from the container, a separator is disposed between each electrode, and a power supply with associated wiring provides a DC constant voltage or constant current to the carbon-based electrodes, wherein an aqueous solution containing at least one target species to be removed from the aqueous solution is admitted through the inlet, passes by or through the electrodes to a discharge channel that leads to the at least one outlet, wherein the DC voltage applied to the at least one anode and the DC voltage applied to the at least one cathode are DC voltages shown in a Pourbaix diagram of the at least one target species at which the at least one target species is agglutinated on an electrode through a mechanism selected from the group consisting of capacitive adsorption, faradic immobilization, and both capacitive adsorption and faradic immobilization. The agglutination of the at least one target species is caused oxidation of the target species in a pH region of <4 near the at least one anode. Alternatively, the agglutination of the at least one target species is caused by oxidation of the target species in a pH region of <4 near the at least one anode, wherein the oxidation arises from production of oxidizers in a pH region of >10 near the at least one cathode. The power supply is controlled by a process controller or manually. The material with which the electrodes are fabricated has high aqueous permeability and is selected from the group consisting of activated carbon cloth, a mixture of microporous and mesoporous activated carbon, a mixture of mesoporous and macroporous activated carbon, and a mixture of microporous, mesoporous, and macroporous activated carbon. The separator thickness is selected from the group consisting of a range of 1 nm to 100 microns, 2 nm to 50 microns, 2 nm to 30 microns, 1 to 100 microns, 1 to 50 microns, and 1 to 30 microns. The DC voltage used to achieve faradic immobilization is selected from the group consisting of less than 0.6 V, less than 1.2 V, and less than 2.0 V. The electrodes can optionally be separated by an impermeable insulator and wherein the through stream flows only through the porous electrode before reaching a discharge channel, or by a permeable separator wherein the through stream flows by the electrodes through the separator to the discharge channel. An ion-exchange membrane can optionally cover the at least one anode, the at least one cathode, or both electrodes. The electrical potential of zero charge of at least one carbon-based electrode can be shifted by a mechanism selected from the group consisting of reduction of a cathode, oxidation of a cathode, reduction of an anode, and oxidation of an anode. The spacing between electrodes is selected from the group consisting of less than 1 mm, less than 200 microns, less than 50 microns, and less than 20 microns. The cell design of an FPC can be rolled or stacked.
[0222] An anode in an FPC can have an average pore mouth diameter selected from the group consisting of an average pore mouth diameter of 2.0 to 10 nm achieved with a pore mouth diameter profile from 0% to 30% microporous activated carbon and from 70% to 100% mesoporous activated carbon, wherein the microporous activated carbon comprises carbon with a conductivity value >10 S/cm, and an average pore mouth diameter 2.5 to 10 nm achieved with a pore mouth diameter profile of 0% to 20% macroporous activated carbon and 80% to 100% mesoporous activated carbon with a conductivity value >10 S/cm. A cathode in an FPC can have an average pore mouth diameter selected from the group consisting of an average pore mouth diameter of 2.0 to 10 nm achieved with a pore mouth diameter profile from 0% to 30% microporous activated carbon and from 70% to 100% mesoporous activated carbon, wherein the microporous activated carbon comprises carbon with a conductivity value >10 S/cm, and an average pore mouth diameter 2.5 to 10 nm achieved with a pore mouth diameter profile of 0% to 20% macroporous activated carbon and 80% to 100% mesoporous activated carbon with a conductivity value >10 S/cm.
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