Electrochemical removal of dilute heavy metals with carbon felt porous electrodes
- 1 September 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Environmental Technology Letters
- Vol. 2 (9) , 409-418
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09593338109384070
Abstract
Carbon and graphite felt were used as electrode material for the deposition of heavy metals from dilute solution. Owing to their physical properties and convenient use they seemed to be the most interesting material already known for waste water treatment with porous flow through electrodes.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Simultaneous reactions at disk and porous electrodesElectrochimica Acta, 1977
- Electrodeposition and stripping at graphite cloth electrodesJournal of Electroanalytical Chemistry and Interfacial Electrochemistry, 1977
- Porous‐electrode theory with battery applicationsAIChE Journal, 1975
- Analysis of Porous Electrodes with Sparingly Soluble ReactantsJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1973
- Electrochemical removal of copper ions from very dilute solutionsJournal of Applied Electrochemistry, 1972
- Analysis of Porous Electrodes with Sparingly Soluble ReactantsJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1971
- Desalting by Means of Porous Carbon ElectrodesJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1971
- Electrolysis with a flowing solution on graphite packingElectrochimica Acta, 1968
- Electrochemical Fractionation: Potentiostatic Chromatography and Elution Voltammetry.Analytical Chemistry, 1964
- Continuous Quantitative Electrolysis.Analytical Chemistry, 1964