Electrochemical removal of sodium ion from fermented food composts

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Fermented food composts, to be recycled into fertilizer and animal feed, require sodium chloride concentrations to be less than 1 wt% due to several toxicities. Electrochemical methods are used to remove sodium ions from fermented food composts. By washing the compost with tap water (with no electric current applied), 48% of the initial sodium ion is removed. With an electric current density of 3 mA/cm(2) (the distance between the electrodes is 16 cm), the removal efficiency increases to 96% for a 36 h operation. Major factors influencing the efficiency are the treatment time and the electric current density. Removal efficiency increases with energy demand to yield 96% removal at 60 Kwh/m(3). Due to the difference in relative ionic mobility, less than 9% of calcium is removed, during the same operation time, which supports the feasibility of this method.
Publisher
KOREAN INST CHEM ENGINEERS
Issue Date
2000-03
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

REMEDIATION; SOILS

Citation

KOREAN JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, v.17, no.2, pp.245 - 247

ISSN
0256-1115
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/72637
Appears in Collection
CBE-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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