Development of a Proton-Exchange Membrane Electrochemical Reclaimed Water Post-Treatment System

911538

07/01/1991

Event
International Conference On Environmental Systems
Authors Abstract
Content
A single cell electrochemical reactor that utilizes a proton exchange membrane (PEM) as a solid electrolyte is being investigated and developed at Texas A&M University for post-treatment of reclaimed waters with low or negligible electrolyte content. Post-treatment is a final polishing of reclaimed waste waters prior to reuse and constitutes removing organic impurities at levels as high as 100 ppm to <500 ppb total organic carbon (TOC) content and provides disinfection. The system does not utilize or produce either expendable hardware components or chemicals and has no moving parts. This paper discusses a single cell reactor concept; test system design; the role of the proton exchange membrane; and the principle of organic impurity oxidation at PEM interfacial reaction zones. The fabrication performance evaluation; design and sizing of a prototype system are discussed. Test data and kinetic analysis are presented. The feasibility and application for water reclamation processes in controlled ecological environments (e.g., lunar/Mars habitats) are also presented. Test results show that the electrochemical single cell reactor provides effective post- treatment.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/911538
Pages
12
Citation
Kaba, L., Hitchens, G., Murphy, O., and Verostko, C., "Development of a Proton-Exchange Membrane Electrochemical Reclaimed Water Post-Treatment System," SAE Technical Paper 911538, 1991, https://doi.org/10.4271/911538.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jul 1, 1991
Product Code
911538
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English