OK, found a reference which is a game-changer (like when one could potentially get a 100% conversion of chloride to perchlorate) for those with access
to Boron doped diamond film electrodes (BDD). Apparently, great electrodes, but perhaps too good, as when applied to the electrolysis of hypochlorite,
they contributed to some major unwanted byproduct formations, not just chlorate but perchlorate as well.
Per " Understanding Chlorite, Chlorate and Perchlorate Formation When Generating Hypochlorite Using Boron Doped Diamond Film Electrodes available http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.100... to quote:
"Oxychlorine radicals (ClO•, ClO2•, ClO3•) were found to chemically adsorb to both secondary and tertiary carbon atoms on the BDD surface. These
chemisorbed intermediates could react with hydroxyl radicals to regenerate the original chlorine oxyanion (ClO−, ClO2-, ClO3-), and produce ≡CO•
and =C•HO sites on the BDD surface. The ≡C-O• and =C•HO sites also reacted with oxychlorine radicals to form chemisorbed intermediates, which
could then be converted to higher oxidation states (ClO2, ClO3−, ClO4-) via reaction with hydroxyl radicals. "
And:
"Batch experiments show complete conversion of chloride to perchlorate can be achieved with prolonged electrolysis times. Perchlorate production can
be minimized in batch and flow-through systems by using low current densities, high mass transfer rates, and high concentrations of chloride (9, 11,
12). High mass transfer rates, driven by fluid convection, are hypothesized to affect the multistep reaction for perchlorate formation from chloride,
as chloride ions are progressively oxidized to higher oxychlorine anions, as illustrated by:
Cl− -> OCl− -> ClO2− -> ClO3− -> ClO4
High rates of mass transfer near the surface result in low concentrations of intermediate products, so that complete chloride oxidation to perchlorate
can be minimized. "
Cited reactions of interest include:
HOCl + HO• -> OCl• + H2O [2]
OCl• + HO• -> HClO2 [4]
HOCl2 + HO• -> ClO2• + H2O [13]
ClO2• + HO• -> HClO3 [15]
More on perchlorate formation:
"Production of perchlorate from chlorate has been presented previously in Azizi et al. (37). A brief summary of the most important reactions is
contained here. Figure 6 shows the generation of ClO3• and HO• near the BDD anode surface, which subsequently combine, activationlessly, to form
HClO4. Chlorate radical production occurs more readily than water oxidation, as it becomes activationless at 0.76 V/SHE. The combination of radicals
is activationless, with a reaction energy ΔE = −133 kJ/mol."
Comments from a prior work "Mechanism of Perchlorate Formation on Boron-Doped Diamond Film Anodes" per, Azizi et al, at https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22029642/ , to quote:
"Perchloric acid is then formed via the activationless homogeneous reaction between ClO(3)(•) and OH(•) in the diffuse layer next to the BDD
surface. DFT simulations also indicate that the reduction of ClO(3)(•) can occur at radical sites on the BDD surface to form ClO(3)(-) and ClO(2),
which limits the overall rate of ClO(4)(-) formation."
The above works suggest possible parallel investigations, not just in electrolysis experiments, but also in battery/electrochemical cells (for
example, the "Bleach Battery") with different carbon-based electrodes.
[Edited on 3-4-2020 by AJKOER] |