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Veratric acid removal from water by electrochemical oxidation on BDD anode

MetadataDetails
Publication Date2018-02-01
JournalIOP Conference Series Materials Science and Engineering
AuthorsInshad Jum’h, Arwa Abdelhay, Ahmad Telfah, M-Ali H. Al-Akhras, Akeel T. Al-Kazwini
InstitutionsLeibniz Institute for Analytical Sciences - ISAS, German Jordanian University
Citations6

The efficiency of boron doped diamond (BDD) in the electrochemical treatment of synthetically contaminated water with veratric acid (VA), one kind of polyphenolic type compounds, is investigated in this work. A BDD electrode was practically fabricated using hot filament chemical vapor deposition (HFCVD). Later on, the BDD electrode was implemented as an anode in a batch electrolytic reactor. The effect of operating factors such as the initial concentration of VA, NaCl addition, and supporting electrolyte type (H2SO4, H3PO4 and Na2SO4) was studied. The chemical oxygen demand (COD) measurements were conducted to study the VA electrolysis kinetics. The experimental data suggested that sodium sulfate was the best supporting electrolyte as the COD removal reached a percentage of 100% using 1 mmol/dm3 as VA concentration. The kinetics of the COD decay of the VA electrolysis were found to obey the pseudo-first order model. Remarkably, the electrolysis process is significantly speeded up once chloride is added to the reaction. The complete COD removal was achieved in 60 minutes of treatment.