4.6 Article

High-Desalination Performance via Redox Couple Reaction in the Multichannel Capacitive Deionization System

Journal

ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING
Volume 7, Issue 19, Pages 16182-16189

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.9b03121

Keywords

desalination; capacitive deionization; multichannel flow cell; redox reaction; ferricyanide and ferrocyanide; multichannel redox CDI

Funding

  1. Technology Innovation Program (Development of Low Desalination Water Treatment Engineering Package System for Industrial Recycle Water Production) - Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy (MOUE, Korea) [10082572]
  2. Kongju National University

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Capacitive deionization (CDI) has received much attention, which is considered as a promising electrochemical water desalination technology. However, an obstacle to its conventional application is the limited ion removal capacity of carbon electrodes induced by the electrical double layer. Here, a novel CDI system, called multichannel redox CDI (MC-RCDI), was proposed to enhance the desalination performance of CDI by utilizing the redox couple of ferricyanide/ferrocyanide as well as the adsorption capacity of the conventional carbon electrodes. In the MC-RCDI, the feed water in the middle channel was fully separated from the redox couple-containing electrolyte in the side channel by ion exchange membranes. Then, along with the carbon adsorption capacity, the electrochemically reversible redox reaction provided an additional salt removal capacity driven by the charge inequality. Thus, the MC-RCDI exhibited a significantly enhanced salt adsorption capacity (SAC) of 67.8 mg/g (8.59 mu mol/J) and a charge efficiency of similar to 90%. The results demonstrated as greater than threefold increase in the salt removal capacity, compared to the system without the redox reaction (SAC approximate to 19.9 mg/g, 7.50 mu mol/J). Moreover, in the MC-RCDI system, a sustainable redox reaction allowed a continuous desalination without a discharging step, possibly leading to the desalination of concentrated feed solution, up to seawater level standards.

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