dimecres, 5 de novembre del 2014

Cathode potential and anode electron donor evaluation for a suitable treatment of nitrate-contaminated groundwater in bioelectrochemical systems

Our research for improving the bioremediation of nitrate-polluted groundwater using bioelectrochemical systems has allowed us to publish the article Cathode potential and anode electron donor evaluation for a suitable treatment of nitrate-contaminated groundwater in bioelectrochemical systems in the journal Chemical Engineering Journal.

The work has been carried out by Narcis Pous, Sebastià Puig, M. Dolors Balaguer and Jesús Colprim.

In this article we demonstrated that nitrate-polluted groundwater can be succesfully treated in a bioelectrochemical system without requirements of organic matter and a competitive cost.

The abstract is:

"Several regions around the world present high levels of nitrate in groundwater. Due to its toxicity, nitrate must be removed before the groundwater is used as drinking- water. This study assessed how a denitrifying bioelectrochemical system could be operated to treat nitrate- polluted groundwater. It evaluated the cathode potential (from +597 to -703 mV vs SHE) and the anode electron donor (acetate and water). Similar trends were found regardless of the anode electron donor. The nitrate removal rate increased from 1.05 to 5.44 mgN-NO3-·LNCC-1·h-1 when the cathode potential was lowered from +597 to -403 mV vs SHE, where it stabilized. The nitrate reduction end- products (nitrite, nitrous oxide and dinitrogen gas) also changed with the different potentials of the cathode electrode. The World Health Organization nitrates and nitrites standards for drinking- water were reached at cathode potentials between -103 and -203 mV vs SHE. The highest rate of nitrate conversion to N2 (2.59 mgN-NO3-·LNCC-1·h-1, 93.9%) occurred at -123 mV using water as anode electron donor, with an estimated operational cost similar to conventional technologies (0.68·10-2 kWh·gN-NO3-removed-1). The long-term stability of proposed operation was demonstrated during 96 days, and the rate of
nitrate conversion to N2 even increased to 4.09 mgN-NO3-·LNCC-1·h-1. A carbon- free operation for a bioelectrochemical system has been developed to treat nitrate- polluted groundwater at a competitive cost."

The DOI code is: 10.1016/j.cej.2014.11.002.

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