Effect
of Oxidation of Carbon Material on Suspension
Electrodes for Flow Electrode Capacitive Deionization
Posted on 2015-03-03 - 00:00
Flow
electrode deionization (FCDI) is an emerging area for continuous
and scalable deionization, but the electrochemical and flow properties
of the flow electrode need to be improved to minimize energy consumption.
Chemical oxidation of granular activated carbon (AC) was examined
here to study the role of surface heteroatoms on rheology and electrochemical
performance of a flow electrode (carbon slurry) for deionization processes.
Moreover, it was demonstrated that higher mass densities could be
used without increasing energy for pumping when using oxidized active
material. High mass-loaded flow electrodes (28% carbon content) based
on oxidized AC displayed similar viscosities (∼21 Pa s) to
lower mass-loaded flow electrodes (20% carbon content) based on nonoxidized
AC. The 40% increased mass loading (from 20% to 28%) resulted in a
25% increase in flow electrode gravimetric capacitance (from 65 to
83 F g–1) without sacrificing flowability (viscosity).
The electrical energy required to remove ∼18% of the ions (desalt)
from of the feed solution was observed to be significantly dependent
on the mass loading and decreased (∼60%) from 92 ± 7 to
28 ± 2.7 J with increased mass densities from 5 to 23 wt %. It
is shown that the surface chemistry of the active material in a flow
electrode effects the electrical and pumping energy requirements of
a FCDI system.
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Hatzell, Kelsey
B.; Hatzell, Marta C.; Cook, Kevin M.; Boota, Muhammad; Housel, Gabrielle M.; McBride, Alexander; et al. (2016). Effect
of Oxidation of Carbon Material on Suspension
Electrodes for Flow Electrode Capacitive Deionization. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/es5055989