Simultaneous algae-polluted water treatment and electricity generation using a biocathode-coupled electrocoagulation cell (bio-ECC)
Date
2017-06-21Author
Donga, Yue
Qub, Youpeng
Li, Chao
Hana, Xiaoyu
Ambuchi, John Justo
Liua, Junfeng
Yua, Yanling
Fenga, Yujie
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
How to utilize electrocoagulation (EC) technology for algae-polluted water treatment in an
energy-efficient manner remains a critical challenge for its widespread application. Herein, a
novel biocathode-coupled electrocoagulation cell (bio-ECC) with sacrificial iron anode and nitri-
fying biocathode was developed. Under different solution conductivities (2.33 ± 0.25 mS cm−1 and
4.94 ± 0.55 mS cm−1), the bio-ECC achieved almost complete removal of algae cells. The maximum power
densities of 8.41 and 11.33Wm−3 at corresponding current densities of 48.03A m−3 and 66.26A m−3
were obtained, with the positive energy balance of 4.52 and 7.44Wm−3. In addition, the bio-ECC exhib-
ited excellent NH4
+-N removal performance with the nitrogen removal rates of 7.28 mg L−1 h−1 and
6.77 mg L−1 h−1 in cathode chamber, indicating the superiority of bio-ECC in NH4
+-N removal. Pyrose-
quencing revealed that nitrifiers including Nitrospira, Nitrobacter, Nitrosococcus, and Nitrosomonas were
enriched in biocathode. The removal mechanisms of algae in anode chamber were also explored by AFM
and SEM-EDX tests. These results provide a proof-of-concept study of transferring energy-intensive EC
process into an energy-neutral process with high-efficiency algae removal and electricity recovery.
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: