4.4 Article

Electrochemical treatment of cork boiling wastewater with a boron-doped diamond anode

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 26-35

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09593330.2014.934743

Keywords

anodic oxidation; BDD; cork boiling wastewater; electrolyte concentration; biodegradability

Funding

  1. FEDER
  2. Programa Operacional Factores de Competitividade - COMPETE
  3. FCT of the MTP Unit [PTDC/AGR-AAM/102042/2008, PTDC/AAC-AMB/103112/2008, PEst-OE/CTM/UI0195/2011]
  4. [SFRH/BD/81368/2011]
  5. [BI-2-PTDC/AGR-AAM/102042/2008]

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Anodic oxidation at a boron-doped diamond anode of cork boiling wastewater was successfully used for mineralization and biodegradability enhancement required for effluent discharge or subsequent biological treatment, respectively. The influence of the applied current density (30-70mA/cm(2)) and the background electrolyte concentration (0-1.5g/LNa2SO4) on the performance of the electrochemical oxidation was investigated. The supporting electrolyte was required to achieve conductivities that enabled anodic oxidation at the highest current intensities applied. The results indicated that pollutant removal increased with the applied current density, and after 8h, reductions greater than 90% were achieved for COD, dissolved organic carbon, total phenols and colour. The biodegradability enhancement was from 0.13 to 0.59 and from 0.23 to 0.72 for the BOD/COD ratios with BOD of 5 and 20 days' incubation period, respectively. The tests without added electrolyte were performed at lower applied electrical charges (15mA/cm(2) or 30V) with good organic load removal (up to 80%). For an applied current density of 30mA/cm(2), there was a minimum of electric conductivity of 1.9mS/cm (corresponding to 0.75g/L of Na2SO4), which minimized the specific energy consumption.

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