Pulsed Electrolysis of Boron-Doped Carbon Dramatically Improves Impurity Tolerance and Longevity of HO Production.

Environ Sci Technol

Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, United States.

Published: May 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Electrocatalytic water treatment is gaining scientific interest, but its efficiency and longevity need improvement for real-world applications.
  • Researchers have created a framework to optimize pulsed electrolysis, enhancing catalyst impurity tolerance and extending the catalyst's operational life.
  • Using a boron-doped carbon catalyst, the study demonstrates significant performance improvements in producing hydroxyl radicals in challenging conditions, outperforming conventional methods and showing potential for practical water treatment solutions.

Article Abstract

Electrocatalytic water treatment has emerged in the limelight of scientific interest, yet its long-term viability remains largely in the dark. Herein, we present for the first time a comprehensive framework on how to optimize pulsed electrolysis to bolster catalyst impurity tolerance and overall longevity. By examining real wastewater constituents and assessing different catalyst designs, we deconvolute the complexities associated with key pulsing parameters to formulate optimal sequences that maximize operational lifetime. We showcase our approach for cathodic HO electrosynthesis, selected for its widespread importance to wastewater treatment. Our results unveil superior performance for a boron-doped carbon catalyst over state-of-the-art oxidized carbon, with high selectivity (>75%) and near complete recoveries in overpotentials even in the presence of highly detrimental Ni and Zn impurities. We then adapt these fine-tuned settings, obtained under a three-electrode arrangement, for practical two-electrode operation using a novel strategy that conserves the desired electrochemical potentials at the catalytic interface. Even under various impurity concentrations, our pulses substantially improve long-term HO production to 287 h and 35 times that attainable via conventional electrolysis. Our findings underscore the versatility of pulsed electrolysis necessary for developing more practical water treatment technologies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10174061PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.3c00305DOI Listing

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