1995
DOI: 10.1149/1.2044186
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Electrochemical Destruction of Aniline and 4‐Chloroaniline for Wastewater Treatment Using a Carbon‐PTFE  O 2 ‐ Fed Cathode

Abstract: The electrochemical degradation of i00 ppm aniline and 4-chloroaniline in basic aqueous solutions of pH ranging between I0.i and 12.7 has been studied at constant current intensity using a Pb/PbQ anode and a carbon-polytetrafluoroethylene O2-fed cathode. Under these conditions, hydrogen peroxide was electrogenerated in the cell via a two-electron reduction of oxygen gas fed to the cathode. The current efficiency for H~O2 generation depended on the applied current intensity and the background electrolyte used. … Show more

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Cited by 256 publications
(141 citation statements)
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“…Several possible mechanisms of indirect electrochemical oxidation have brought forward that there are possible additional steps and other reactive oxygen intermediates involved in Reactions (2) and (3), which have been used in the indirect oxidation of organic pollution compounds (Brillas et al, 1995;Yu et al, 2006). However, to the authors' knowledge, few of them have adequate or instantaneous evidence about the generation mechanism of the reactive species.…”
Section: Research Radicals By Chemiluminescencementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Several possible mechanisms of indirect electrochemical oxidation have brought forward that there are possible additional steps and other reactive oxygen intermediates involved in Reactions (2) and (3), which have been used in the indirect oxidation of organic pollution compounds (Brillas et al, 1995;Yu et al, 2006). However, to the authors' knowledge, few of them have adequate or instantaneous evidence about the generation mechanism of the reactive species.…”
Section: Research Radicals By Chemiluminescencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The electrochemical oxidation process will not be economical because of the high-energy consumption that hinders its large scale application. Since the 1990s, there has been an increasing interest in the indirect oxidation of organic pollutions by reactive species such as hydrogen peroxide, which are generated on the cathode which cut the energy cost dramatically (Shen et al, 2005;Brillas et al, 1995). Although the degradation efficiency of the reactive species has been largely researched and several possible mechanisms of indirect electrochemical oxidation have brought forward, to the authors' knowledge, few of them have adequate and instantaneous evidence about the generation mechanism of the reactive species, especially radicals on the cathode.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…25,28 Typical layers employed in the elimination of organic compounds have this characteristic, for example, SnO 2 or PbO 2 . 1,11,23,29 The introduction of platinum in the oxide layer decreases the overpotential for OER and, therefore, the electrocatalytic performance in organic oxidation decreases according to the increase of "active" sites for hydroxyl radicals. 25 In fact, the electrodes containing platinum ͑13 atom %͒ have a lower efficiency for elimination of phenol, in good agreement with the presence of a higher concentration of chemisorbed OH · radicals.…”
Section: B423mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These redox couples can be added to or present in the waste water. In irreversible process, strong oxidants like ozone Wang et al, 2006), chlorine (Panizza & Cerisola, 2003), hydrogen peroxide (Brillas et al, 1996;Brillas et al, 1995;Do & Chen, 1993) and hydroxyl free radicals etc. are generated and in-situ applied to mineralize the organic pollutants.…”
Section: (A)mentioning
confidence: 99%