This is a demo store. No orders will be fulfilled.

Electrochemical abatement of aquatic metoprolol by porous foam-titanium based metal oxide anodic membranes

Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering [2023]
Junjian Zheng, Jiaqi Wei, Shaoping Xu, Yuanyuan Zhang, Xueye Wang, Zhiwei Wang
ABSTRACT

Electrochemical membrane filtration (EMF) is a promising advanced oxidation technology for eliminating aquatic refractory pharmaceuticals. In this work, three porous foam-titanium based metal oxide (MO x) anodic membranes were prepared for comparison of their effectiveness against the model pharmaceutical pollutant metoprolol. The electrooxidation efficiencies of metoprolol by all flow-by operated anodic membranes were found to be elevated with increasing charging voltage and decreasing electrolyte solution pH, in which the PbO 2 membrane exhibited more efficient metoprolol degradation efficiency over SnO 2 and RuO 2 membranes. At the chosen charging voltage of 2 V and electrolyte solution pH 7, compared to the flow-by mode, the higher total organic carbon (TOC) removal and less electrical energy consumption was achieved by the flow-through operated PbO 2 membrane, ascribed to the enhanced mass-transfer of metoprolol and its intermediate by-products toward the anode surface. The physisorbed and free HO • produced by PbO 2 membrane were found to be the key oxidants accounting for metoprolol degradation, which induced the transformation of metoprolol by attacking its benzene ring and side chains. Apart from the capacity for detoxifying metoprolol-containing influent, PbO 2 membrane also exhibited favorable stability in flow-through mode. The study provides an effective strategy for the electrochemical remediation of pharmaceutical-polluted water and wastewater.

MATERIALS

Shall we send you a message when we have discounts available?

Remind me later

Thank you! Please check your email inbox to confirm.

Oops! Notifications are disabled.