Water Science and Technology (Jul 2023)

Treatment of coking wastewater using a needle coke electro-Fenton cathode: optimizing of COD, NH4+-N, and TOC removal and characterization of pollutants

  • Chen Chi,
  • Xinyu Zhou,
  • Yanqiu Wang,
  • Xinyu Gao,
  • Jinfeng Bai,
  • Yuting Guo,
  • Jianwen Ni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2023.172
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 88, no. 1
pp. 106 – 122

Abstract

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Coking wastewater is a typical organic refractory wastewater characterized by high chemical oxygen demand (COD), NH4+-N, and total organic carbon (TOC). Herein, coking wastewater was treated using a heterogeneous electro-Fenton (EF) system comprising a novel iron-loaded needle coke composite cathode (Fe-NCCC) and a dimensionally stable anode. The response surface methodology was used to optimize the reaction conditions. The predicted and actual COD removal rates were 92.13 and 89.96% under optimum conditions of an applied voltage of 4.92 V, an electrode spacing of 2.29 cm, and an initial pH of 3.01. The optimized removal rate of NH4+-N and TOC was 84.12 and 73.44%, respectively. The color of coking wastewater decreased from 250-fold to colorless, and the BOD5/COD increased from 0.126 to 0.34. Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy show that macromolecular heterocyclic organic compounds decomposed into straight-chain small molecules and even completely mineralized. The energy consumption of the EF process was 23.5 RMB Yuan per cubic meter of coking wastewater. The EF system comprising the Fe-NCCC can effectively remove pollutants from coking wastewater, has low electricity consumption, and can simultaneously reduce various pollution indicators with potential applications in the treatment of high-concentration and difficult-to-degrade organic wastewater. HIGHLIGHTS A novel needle coke composite cathode was fabricated to treat coking wastewater.; The maximum COD removal was ∼90% using an electro-Fenton process.; The COD, -N, and TOC removal rates were optimized using the Box–Behnken design.; Macromolecular organic matter in coking wastewater was degraded after treatment.;

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