4.7 Article

Electrogenerated iron-based adsorbents: A case study of an azo dye removal viewed from a fundamental physico-chemical perspective

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 454, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2022.140129

Keywords

Iron electrolysis; Current efficiency; Electrogeneration; iron -based adsorbents; Azo dye adsorption; Detailed kinetic models

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The aim of this study was to investigate the electrogeneration of iron-based solids and their use in dye adsorption. Experiments were conducted to determine the efficiency of ferrous ion production at different pH levels and currents. The results showed that the current efficiency for Fe2+ was low and independent of the examined factors. Electrogenerated iron hydroxides were formed before possibly converting to dehydrated hydroxides such as magnetite. Adsorption experiments were carried out to study the adsorption of tartrazine on the electrogenerated iron oxyhydroxides. The adsorbent's crystallinity, surface area, pore volume, morphology, and elemental composition were also analyzed.
The aim of this manuscript was to investigate the electrogeneration of iron-based solids and their use in the adsorption of an azo dye. Experiments of electrochemical generation of iron hydr(oxides) were carried out in a Hoffman cell and in a well-stirred batch reactor at 25 degrees C. The oxidation of iron metal at the anode and the reduction of water at the cathode were the electrochemical reactions confirmed to occur. A 22 factorial design of experiments was applied to investigate the effect of initial pH and current on the current efficiency for the production of ferrous ion at an electrolyte concentration of 300 g L-1. The current efficiency for Fe2+ was much lower than unity (0.204 +/- 0.009) and it was statistically independent of the examined factors (p > 0.05). An approximately 3:1 M mixture of amorphous ferric and ferrous hydroxides was electrogenerated before being possibly converted to dehydrated hydroxides such as magnetite. The iron hydroxides were formed by precipitation reactions of soluble iron species at a rate constant higher than 0.072 +/- 0.013 s-1. Additional experiments of electrogeneration of these solid adsorbents at electrolyte concentrations between 250 and 1.5 g L-1 revealed a significant (p <= 0.05) decrease in the current efficiency for Fe2+ formation from 0.180 +/- 0.006 to 0.118 +/- 0.008. Experiments of tartrazine adsorption on the electrogenerated iron oxyhydroxides were carried out batchwise at different initial concentrations of the dye at 25 degrees C. Electrogeneration of oxyhydroxides and adsorption were described correctly by detailed kinetic models. The crystallinity of the electrogenerated adsorbent was examined by X-ray diffraction analysis, while its specific surface area, pore volume and average pore size were from BET analysis. SEM and EDX analyses were conducted to examine its morphology and elemental composition.

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