2022 Annual Meeting
(710f) Molecular Electrocatalysis for Electrochemical Ammonia Recovery from Wastewater Nitrate
Authors
Engineering NO3RR processes that operate at practically needed production rates is challenging because the majority of nitrate-rich wastewaters (e.g., fertilizer runoff) have dilute nitrate concentrations (< 5 mM). Molecular catalysts are wellâsuited to reduce nitrate at low concentrations in real wastewaters due to tunable metalâligand interactions that provide a well-defined coordination environment for reactant recognition and product selectivity. We use the CoâN4 macrocyclic electrocatalyst CoDIM, a molecular NO3RR catalyst selective for ammonia, as a model catalyst for the treatment of real, nitrate-rich wastewaters.
We study the activity, selectivity, and energy efficiency of CoDIMâcatalyzed NO3RR in electrochemical stripping (ECS), a process that facilitates reactive separation of produced ammonia from real wastewaters. From real secondary effluent, we demonstrate greater than 70% nitrate removal with a faradaic efficiency of 25% and ammonia selectivity of 98% in the cathode chamber. To utilize the anode chamber, we introduce a parallel feed of ammonium-rich reverse osmosis retentate for further N recovery. We demonstrate a peak ammonia yield of 2.9 nmol s-1 cm-2, ECS energy efficiency of 0.13 kWh / gram N removal, and no loss in nitrate-to-ammonia selectivity. To further benchmark CoDIMâcatalyzed NO3RR activity, we performed foot-of-the-wave and plateau current analysis. Our results highlight molecular and process-level insights that facilitate ammonia production from real wastewaters.