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Acidification-based direct electrolysis of treated wastewater for hydrogen production and water reuse

This report describes the direct electrolysis of treated wastewater (as a catholyte) to produce hydrogen and potentially reuse the water. To suppress the negative shift of the cathodic potential due to an increase in pH by the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), the treated wastewater is acidified us...

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Autores principales: Han, Ji-Hyung, Bae, Jeongwook, Lim, Joohyun, Jwa, Eunjin, Nam, Joo-Youn, Hwang, Kyo Sik, Jeong, Namjo, Choi, Jiyeon, Kim, Hanki, Jeung, Youn-Cheul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10582299/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37860540
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20629
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author Han, Ji-Hyung
Bae, Jeongwook
Lim, Joohyun
Jwa, Eunjin
Nam, Joo-Youn
Hwang, Kyo Sik
Jeong, Namjo
Choi, Jiyeon
Kim, Hanki
Jeung, Youn-Cheul
author_facet Han, Ji-Hyung
Bae, Jeongwook
Lim, Joohyun
Jwa, Eunjin
Nam, Joo-Youn
Hwang, Kyo Sik
Jeong, Namjo
Choi, Jiyeon
Kim, Hanki
Jeung, Youn-Cheul
author_sort Han, Ji-Hyung
collection PubMed
description This report describes the direct electrolysis of treated wastewater (as a catholyte) to produce hydrogen and potentially reuse the water. To suppress the negative shift of the cathodic potential due to an increase in pH by the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), the treated wastewater is acidified using the synergetic effect of protons generated from the bipolar membrane and inorganic precipitation occurred at the surface of the cathode during the HER. Natural seawater, as an accessible source for Mg(2+) ions, was added to the treated wastewater because the concentration of Mg(2+) ions contained in the original wastewater was too low for acidification to occur. The mixture of treated wastewater with seawater was acidified to pH 3, allowing the initial cathode potential to be maintained for more than 100 h. The amount of inorganic precipitates formed on the cathode surface is greater than that in the control case (adding 0.5 M NaCl instead of seawater) but does not adversely affect the cathodic potential and Faradaic efficiency for H(2) production. Additionally, it was confirmed that less organic matter was adsorbed to the inorganic deposits under acidic conditions. These indicate that acidification plays an important role in improving the performance and stability of low-grade water electrolysis. Considering that the treated wastewater is discharged near the ocean, acidification-based electrolysis of the effluent with seawater can be a water reuse technology for green hydrogen production, enhancing water resilience and contributing to the circular economy of water resources.
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spelling pubmed-105822992023-10-19 Acidification-based direct electrolysis of treated wastewater for hydrogen production and water reuse Han, Ji-Hyung Bae, Jeongwook Lim, Joohyun Jwa, Eunjin Nam, Joo-Youn Hwang, Kyo Sik Jeong, Namjo Choi, Jiyeon Kim, Hanki Jeung, Youn-Cheul Heliyon Research Article This report describes the direct electrolysis of treated wastewater (as a catholyte) to produce hydrogen and potentially reuse the water. To suppress the negative shift of the cathodic potential due to an increase in pH by the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), the treated wastewater is acidified using the synergetic effect of protons generated from the bipolar membrane and inorganic precipitation occurred at the surface of the cathode during the HER. Natural seawater, as an accessible source for Mg(2+) ions, was added to the treated wastewater because the concentration of Mg(2+) ions contained in the original wastewater was too low for acidification to occur. The mixture of treated wastewater with seawater was acidified to pH 3, allowing the initial cathode potential to be maintained for more than 100 h. The amount of inorganic precipitates formed on the cathode surface is greater than that in the control case (adding 0.5 M NaCl instead of seawater) but does not adversely affect the cathodic potential and Faradaic efficiency for H(2) production. Additionally, it was confirmed that less organic matter was adsorbed to the inorganic deposits under acidic conditions. These indicate that acidification plays an important role in improving the performance and stability of low-grade water electrolysis. Considering that the treated wastewater is discharged near the ocean, acidification-based electrolysis of the effluent with seawater can be a water reuse technology for green hydrogen production, enhancing water resilience and contributing to the circular economy of water resources. Elsevier 2023-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10582299/ /pubmed/37860540 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20629 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Han, Ji-Hyung
Bae, Jeongwook
Lim, Joohyun
Jwa, Eunjin
Nam, Joo-Youn
Hwang, Kyo Sik
Jeong, Namjo
Choi, Jiyeon
Kim, Hanki
Jeung, Youn-Cheul
Acidification-based direct electrolysis of treated wastewater for hydrogen production and water reuse
title Acidification-based direct electrolysis of treated wastewater for hydrogen production and water reuse
title_full Acidification-based direct electrolysis of treated wastewater for hydrogen production and water reuse
title_fullStr Acidification-based direct electrolysis of treated wastewater for hydrogen production and water reuse
title_full_unstemmed Acidification-based direct electrolysis of treated wastewater for hydrogen production and water reuse
title_short Acidification-based direct electrolysis of treated wastewater for hydrogen production and water reuse
title_sort acidification-based direct electrolysis of treated wastewater for hydrogen production and water reuse
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10582299/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37860540
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e20629
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