Abstract

To tackle the escalating issue of ammonia nitrogen water pollution, developing efficient removal technologies holds paramount significance. In this work, an electrochemical membrane reactor (EMR) was constructed for the decontamination of ammonia nitrogen wastewater using the coal-based carbon membrane (CCM) as the flow-through anode. The removal efficiency and degradation mechanism of ammonia nitrogen by EMR during the treatment were investigated. It was found that, under applied voltage and in the presence of chloride ions, the CCM exhibited excellent chlorine evolution performance, and as a result, the EMR had excellent ammonia nitrogen removal efficiency. The removal of ammonia nitrogen by the flow-through EMR was following the pseudo-first-order kinetics. Analysis revealed that various operating parameters, including applied voltage, chloride ion concentration, flow rate, pH value, and initial ammonia concentration, all significantly influenced the ammonia nitrogen treatment performance of EMR. At optimal operation conditions (feed concentration of 30 mg/L, applied voltage of 2.8 V, NaCl concentration of 0.1 mol/L and flow rate of 2 ml/min), the EMR achieved a removal rate of 100 % for ammonia nitrogen with a low energy consumption (EC) of 0.0380 kW•h/g-NH4-N. The degradation mechanism analysis revealed that the primary means of ammonia removal relied on indirect oxidation mediated by OCl·, which was generated by the oxidation of Cl- on the surface of CCM within the solution under the influence of the electric field. Furthermore, the EMR demonstrated good applicability across various water matrices. In conclusion, the EMR holds considerable potential for the decontamination of ammonia nitrogen-containing wastewater.

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