Manganese oxide-functionalized graphene sponge electrodes for electrochemical chlorine-free disinfection of tap water
Anna Segues Codina, Natalia Sergienko, Carles M. Borrego, Jelena, Radjenovic

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that manganese oxide-functionalized graphene sponge electrodes can effectively disinfect tap water without chlorine, using low-voltage electrooxidation, with increased bacterial inactivation after storage, and highlights their potential for low-cost water treatment.
Contribution
Introduces a novel manganese oxide-functionalized graphene sponge electrode for chlorine-free water disinfection, enhancing stability and efficiency in electrochemical bacterial removal.
Findings
Achieved 2.2 log E. coli removal during electrooxidation.
Increased bacterial inactivation to 4.6 log after storage at 37°C.
Energy consumption was 1.2-1.6 kWh/m³ for real tap water treatment.
Abstract
Low-cost reduced graphene oxide sponges functionalized with manganese oxide were used as electrodes for the disinfection of Escherichia coli in water. Manganese oxide was doped with amino groups MnxOyNH2 to strengthen the bond with the graphene coating and improve the electrochemical stability of the sponge. The Mn II and Mn III incorporated into the graphene coating favored the formation of oxygen vacancies and enhanced the electric and catalytic properties of the anode. Electrooxidation of real tap water at 29 A m2 resulted in 2.2 log removal of E. coli. After storing the treated samples for 18 h at 25 and 37 {\deg}C, the removal of E. coli increased to 3.3 and 4.6 log, respectively, demonstrating the irreparable damage to the bacterial cells via low-voltage electroporation, and the key role of storage temperature in their further inactivation. The energy consumption of the system…
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