Abstract

Electrocoagulation (EC) is gaining increased attention for water treatment as it efficiently removes various water contaminants. Therefore, EC was applied to remove arsenic from groundwater of a highly contaminated site in Hamburg, Germany. Groundwater containing 3250 and 14,600 µg/L arsenic, mainly as Arsenite (As(III)), was treated in three different EC batch reactors using a monopolar parallel electrode-configuration. This study focused on iron EC with constant current densities and variable voltage, to investigate the influence of current density, surface to volume ratio, initial arsenic concentration and water volume on the removal of arsenic and the influences on the groundwater composition. Arsenic removal >99.9% was achieved for configurations with high iron dosage after four hours of EC treatment. German drinking water standard for arsenic (<10 µg/L) was obtained after around two hours depending on the applied current densities. Arsenic removal efficiency shows independence from current density, surface to volume ratio, initial concentration and water volume, with respect to the calculated iron dosage. Consequently, the dimensioning and regime of efficient operation of the EC reactor for arsenic removal from groundwater can be calculated solely from the iron dosage determined by the applied current.

Highlights

  • Accepted: 27 February 2021Groundwater is the world’s most widely used source of drinking water [1] and needs protection and purification, especially in case of contamination

  • The present study focuses on an inexpensive EC batch reactor with extremely high initial arsenic concentrations at a contaminated groundwater plume

  • The results of this study show an arsenic removal >99.9% for experiments that ran for 240 min and residual arsenic concentrations

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Summary

Introduction

Groundwater is the world’s most widely used source of drinking water [1] and needs protection and purification, especially in case of contamination. Arsenic in drinking water has been shown to be toxic, mutagenic and carcinogenic [2,3,4]. The German Drinking Water Ordinance limits arsenic to

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