Electrochemical Oxidation of Organic Pollutants Powered by a Silicon-Based Solar Cell.

ACS Omega

Photovoltaic Materials and Devices (PVMD), Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science Faculty and Sanitary Engineering, Civil Engineering Faculty, Delft University of Technology, 2628 CD Delft, The Netherlands.

Published: October 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The paper discusses a new photo-oxidation device designed for water treatment that uses common materials and operates without electronics, aiming to separate cost from pollutant concentration removal.
  • - It combines a graphite electrochemical system with a silicon solar cell, achieving optimal performance at around 1.6 V, closely matching the solar cell's output, leading to significant removal rates of common pollutants like phenol and methylene blue.
  • - The study found that connecting multiple solar cells can enhance pollutant degradation but may hinder the removal of chemical oxygen demand (COD) due to the increased likelihood of side reactions, suggesting a delicate balance in optimizing treatment efficiency.

Article Abstract

Currently available (photo-)electrochemical technologies for water treatment establish a trade-off between low-pollutant concentration and costs. This paper aims at decoupling these two variables by designing a photo-oxidation device using earth abundant materials and an electronic-free approach. The proposed device combines a graphite/graphite electrochemical system with a silicon-based solar cell that provides the necessary electrical power. First, the optimum operational voltage for the graphite/graphite electrochemical system was found to be around 1.6 V. That corresponded closely to the voltage produced by an a-Si:H/a-Si:H tandem solar cell of approximately 1.35 V. This configuration was shown to provide the best pollutant degradation in relation to the device area, removing 70% of the initial concentration of phenol and 90% of the methylene blue after 4 h of treatment. The chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal of these two contaminants after 4 h of treatment was also promising, 55 and 30%, respectively. Moreover, connecting several solar cells in series led to higher pollutant degradation but lower COD removal, suggesting that the degradation of the intermediate components is a limiting factor. This is expected to be due to the higher currents achieved by the series-connected configuration, which would favor other reactions such as polymerization over the degradation of intermediate species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6369653PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.8b02502DOI Listing

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