4.8 Article

Enhanced Salt Removal in an Inverted Capacitive Deionization Cell Using Amine Modified Microporous Carbon Cathodes

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 18, Pages 10920-10926

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b02320

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Funding

  1. U.S. China Clean Energy Research Center
  2. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-PI0000017]

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Microporous SpectraCarb carbon cloth was treated using nitric acid to enhance negative surface charges of COO- in a neutral solution. This acid-treated carbon was further modified by ethylenediamine to attach surface functional groups, resulting in positive surface charges of -NH3+ via pronation in a neutral solution. Through multiple characterizations, in comparison to pristine SpectraCarb carbon, amine-treated SpectraCarb carbon displays a decreased potential of zero charge but an increased point of zero charge, which is opposed to the effect obtained for acid-treated SpectraCarb carbon. An inverted capacitive deionization cell was constructed using amine-treated cathodes and acid-treated anodes, where the cathode is the negatively polarized electrode and the anode is the positively polarized electrode. Constant-voltage switching operation using NaCl solution showed that the salt removal capacity was approximately 5.3 mg g(-1) at a maximum working voltage of 1.1/0 V, which is an expansion in both the salt capacity and potential window from previous i-CDI results demonstrated for carbon xerogel materials. This improved performance is accounted for by the enlarged cathodic working voltage window through ethylenediamine-derived functional groups, and the enhanced microporosity of the SpectraCarb electrodes for salt adsorption. These results expand the use of i-CDI for efficient desalination applications.

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