Abstract

Flow Electrode Capacitive Deionization (FCDI) is a promising technology that uses carbon materials as flow electrodes in aqueous conditions to enable continuous desalination. In this work, the parametric investigation of the FCDI cell was carried out for low and high surface area activated carbon. When 1 mM/1 mM ferri-/ferrocyanide redox couple in the 1 M NaCl supporting electrolyte containing the 5 wt% high surface area activated carbon and 0.5 wt% MWCNT is circulated as flow electrode at the flow rate of 8 mL/min in the electrode chamber and 0.1 mM NaCl feed water is circulated in single-pass mode at 8 mL/min, the FCDI system achieved a significant improvement in desalination performance up to 76.38 % of SRE, with a high average salt removal rate of 43.925 µg/cm2s @ 2 V, charge efficiency of 20.11 % and average energy consumption of 0.27 kWh/mol, through a thorough parametric investigation. When the FCDI cell was tested with tap water, the average salt removal rate, average energy consumption, and salt removal efficiency were calculated at 6.11 μg/cm2s, 2.46 kWh/mol, and 46.61 % respectively, resulting in the reduction of total dissolved solids of 600 mg/L at the inlet to 365 mg/L at the outlet. The combination of microporous high surface area carbon and ferro-ferri redox couple propelled the desalination performance in comparison with the macroporous low surface area carbon, maximizing the ion removal rate, which further reduced the energy consumption and operating voltage for the process.

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