4.2 Article

Modular Hydrogen Peroxide Electrosynthesis Cell with Anthraquinone-Modified Polyaniline Electrocatalyst

Journal

ACS ES&T ENGINEERING
Volume 1, Issue 3, Pages 446-455

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsestengg.0c00173

Keywords

Hydrogen peroxide; electrochemical; advanced oxidation; anthraquinone; polyaniline

Funding

  1. Robert M. Langer Fellowship at Yale University
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship

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Advanced oxidation processes target the destruction of nonbiodegradable organic pollutants by generating hydroxyl radicals using H2O2 as a precursor. Innovative electrochemical technology efficiently produces H2O2, potentially meeting the demand for decentralized treatment.
Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) target the chemical destruction of a wide range of nonbiodegradable, toxic, and recalcitrant organic pollutants instead of removal via physical separation, which produces contaminant-laden concentrates or solids. Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is the most widely used precursor that produces a highly reactive and nonselective hydroxyl radical at the site of an AOP through activation by UV irradiation. The potential for AOPs to meet the growing demand of transforming a centralized treatment and distribution practice into a modular, small-scale, and decentralized treatment paradigm can be maximized by innovative technologies that can synthesize precursor chemicals also at the site of water treatment, eliminating the need for a continuous chemical supply. We here present an electrochemical H2O2 generation cell that produces a large quantity of H2O2 while consuming only 0.2 to 20% of the total electricity consumption of AOPs in various AOP application scenarios employing UV activation. We achieve high electrochemical H2O2 production efficiency by synthesizing an anthraquinone-modified polyaniline composite that enables an efficient two-electron oxygen reduction reaction. Polyaniline functions as a conductive support with abundant attachment sites, and anthraquinone ensures selective H2O2 generation. In a flow cell equipped with a gas diffusion cathode, H2O2 can be produced at a rate of 1.80 mol g(catalyst)(-1) hr(-1) at 100 mA with a Faradaic efficiency of 95.83%. Finally, we examined the H2O2 production capability of the device with simulated drinking water and wastewater as feed electrolytes to demonstrate its potential for real-world operation scenarios.

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