Electrooxidation of Organics in Waste Water

901312

07/01/1990

Authors
Abstract
Content
Electrooxidation is a means of removing organic solutes directly from waste waters without the use of chemical expendables. Research sponsored by NASA Johnson Space Center is currently being pursued at Texas A&M University to demonstrate the feasibility of the concept for oxidation of organic impurities common to urine, shower waters and space habitat humidity condensates. Electrooxidation of urine and waste water ersatz was experimentally demonstrated. This paper discusses the electrooxidation principle, reaction kinetics, efficiency, power, size, experimental test results and water reclamation applications. Process operating potentials and the use of anodic oxidation potentials that are sufficiently low to avoid oxygen formation and chloride oxidation are described. The design of a novel electrochemical system that incorporates a membrane-based electrolyte based on parametric test data and current fuel cell technology is presented.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/901312
Pages
12
Citation
Hitchens, G., Murphy, O., Kaba, L., and Verostko, C., "Electrooxidation of Organics in Waste Water," SAE Technical Paper 901312, 1990, https://doi.org/10.4271/901312.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jul 1, 1990
Product Code
901312
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English