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. 2015 Nov 1:84:342-9.
doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2015.08.012. Epub 2015 Aug 8.

Fluoride and nitrate removal from brackish groundwaters by batch-mode capacitive deionization

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Fluoride and nitrate removal from brackish groundwaters by batch-mode capacitive deionization

Wangwang Tang et al. Water Res. .

Abstract

Capacitive deionization (CDI) is an emerging water desalination technology in which pairs of porous electrodes are electrically charged to remove ionic species from water. In this work, the feasibility of fluoride and nitrate removal from brackish groundwaters by batch-mode CDI was investigated. Initially, the effects of flow rate, initial fluoride concentration, and initial coexisting NaCl concentration on fluoride removal were studied. The steady-state fluoride concentration declined as the initial fluoride concentration decreased while initial NaCl concentration remained constant. Due to the competitive electrosorption between fluoride and chloride for limited pore surface sites, a higher initial chloride concentration resulted in a higher equilibrium dissolved fluoride concentration. A simplified one-dimensional transport model for dual anions was developed and found to reliably describe the dynamic process of removal of both fluoride and chloride ions in CDI cells over a range of well-defined operating conditions. Based on the ability of the model to describe fluoride removal, it was extended to description of nitrate removal from brackish groundwaters and also found to perform well. Thus, the approach to description of ion removal, at least in batch studies, appears robust and should assist in optimization of design and operating conditions such that optimal removal of trace ionic species is achieved even when high background concentrations of salt are present.

Keywords: Brackish groundwater; Capacitive deionization; Ion electrosorption; Modified Donnan model; Porous electrode theory.

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