Performance of Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes (CEPs) as an Efficient Approach for the Treatment of Industrial Organic Pollutants: A Comprehensive Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes for Organic Pollutants
2.1. Standalone EC Treatment Processes
2.2. Combined Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes
- An intermediate treatment process between other pre- and post-treatment processes is applied [25].
3. Mathematical Modeling of Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes
3.1. Kinetic and Isotherm Modeling of Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes
3.1.1. Standalone Processes
3.1.2. Combined Processes
3.2. Operational Parameters of Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes Optimization by Statistical and AI Methods
3.2.1. Standalone Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes Optimization Using Statistical and AI Methods
3.2.2. Combined Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes Optimization Using Statistical and AI Methods
4. Design Innovations in Electrocoagulation Processes
4.1. Standalone Continuous EC Reactors
4.2. Combined Electrocoagulation Process
5. Scale-Up of Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes
6. Circular Economy in Electrocoagulation-Based Wastewater Treatment
Stage | CE Opportunities | Example | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Pre-recovery stage | Recovery of organic value-added compounds from wastewater before full treatment | Phenolic compound recovery from agro-industrial effluents (e.g., olive mill wastewater) | [106] |
Input stage | Use renewable energy sources (solar, biogas) to power EC units | Solar-powered CEP systems | [107] |
Process stage | Recover hydrogen gas during electrolysis | Hydrogen fuel for internal use | [108] |
Coagulation stage | Optimize electrode materials | Low-cost recycled electrodes | [109] |
By-product stage | Utilize sludge instead of disposal | Utilize sludge for construction (cement, bricks) | [110] |
Water output stage | Water reuse for non-potable applications (irrigation, industrial use) | Treated water used for irrigation | [111] |
Nutrient and material recovery | Recovery of nutrients (P, Ca) and valuable metals (Cr, Cu) | Resource recycling and sales | [112] |
ES System | Nutrient Recovery | Energy Recovery | Material Recovery | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Continuous EC | |||||
Reverse electrodialysis + EC | -- | -- | 99% Cr(VI) | [118] | |
EC | -- | 70% H2 | >97% Blue dye | [107] | |
EC—filtration and constructed wetlands | -- | -- | Cu 82.49% (R); CN 95% (R); 71% Grease | [112] | |
Continuous-flow reactor + Fe/Al electrodes (CFR-EC) | NH3-N: 27% | -- | Heavy metals: Cr6+ (50%), Pb2+ (70%), As3+ (80%), Mg2+ (99%), B3+ (81%), Mn3+ (99%), Ni2+ (20%), Ba2+ (65%) | [78] | |
EC | -- | 14.3–16.3 kWh·kg−1 COD removed | TS: 65% removal | [41] | |
Batch EC | |||||
EC—struvite precipitation | 97.3% TP | 2.35 kWh·m−3 | -- | [113] | |
EC—struvite precipitation | 24.6% N; 88.4% P | -- | -- | [119] | |
EC | 90% PO43− | -- | -- | [109] | |
EC | 74% P; 76% TP | -- | -- | [120] | |
EC | 98.9 % P, 85 % N; | -- | -- | [114] | |
EC | 1.13–1.50 kg NH3-N·m−2·d−1; 5.87–7.93 kWh·kg−1 NH3-N; 56.3–70.9% NH4+ | -- | -- | [115] | |
EC | -- | -- | 93.14% SO42−; 94.86% Ca2+ | [116] | |
EC | -- | -- | 100% Oil | [117] |
7. Life Cycle Assessment in Electrocoagulation Systems
8. Concluding Remarks and Future Research Perspectives
- Electrode Passivation: One of the most significant operational barriers is the passivation of electrodes, which occurs due to the deposition of inorganic scales or precipitated coagulants on the electrode surface [36,39,50]. This phenomenon reduces the effective electrochemical surface area, increases energy consumption, and compromises pollutant removal efficiency. Addressing this issue requires a better understanding of the chemical and electrochemical mechanisms of passivation under different wastewater conditions. Future research should focus on the following:
- ✓
- Developing anti-fouling electrode materials and coatings;
- ✓
- Investigating the use of alternating current (AC) or pulse current modes to minimize passive layer buildup;
- ✓
- ✓
- Applying online monitoring and control strategies to detect and mitigate passivation in real-time.
- Sludge Management Constraints: Although EC generally produces less sludge than chemical coagulation, the nature of the sludge—rich in metal hydroxides and adsorbed organics—makes it difficult to handle and dispose of [34,50,60]. Moreover, in continuous systems, the accumulation of sludge can interfere with flow dynamics and electrode accessibility. To improve the sustainability of CEPs, future research should explore the following:
- ✓
- ✓
- Valorization of EC sludge through resource recovery (e.g., phosphorus and metals) or conversion into construction materials;
- ✓
- Real-time monitoring of sludge characteristics to optimize operating parameters dynamically;
- ✓
- Hybrid reactor designs that integrate sludge management modules directly into the EC process.
- System Scaling and Standardization: Most CEP studies remain at the lab or pilot scale. Scaling these systems to industrial applications requires addressing issues related to uniform current distribution, flow optimization, heat management, and long-term system stability [25,60,66]. Standardizing reactor design and establishing scale-up protocols will be essential for commercialization.
- Process Optimization and Automation: The application of statistical tools like RSM and emerging artificial intelligence (AI) techniques for predictive modeling and control optimization remains limited [35,38,57,60]. Expanding these tools will allow operators to adapt EC systems to variable wastewater compositions and operational conditions, thereby improving robustness and reliability.
- Energy Efficiency and Sustainability: Although solar-powered EC systems have shown promise, more work is needed to improve the energy efficiency of both standalone and hybrid CEPs [25,28,50]. Lifecycle assessment (LCA) and cost–benefit analyses are also essential to demonstrate the environmental and economic viability of CEPs relative to conventional treatment technologies.
- Establish international guidelines and performance standards for continuous EC reactor design, operation, and maintenance.
- Promote interdisciplinary research combining electrochemistry, fluid dynamics, materials science, and environmental engineering to holistically enhance CEPs.
Supplementary Materials
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AB14 | Acid Brown 14 |
AI | Artificial Intelligence |
Al | Aluminum |
ANOVA | Analysis of Variance |
BDD | Boron-Doped Diamond |
BBD | Box–Behnken Design |
BOD5 | Biochemical Oxygen Demand after 5 Days |
BPP | Bipolar Parallel |
BPS | Bipolar Series |
CC | Chemical Coagulation |
CD | Current Density |
CCD | Central Composite Design |
CF-SBBR | Continuous-Flow Sequencing Batch Biofilm Reactor |
COD | Chemical Oxygen Demand |
CSTR | Continuous Stirred Tank Reactor |
Cu | Copper |
d | Inter-Electrode Distance |
DCOD | Degraded Chemical Oxygen Demand/COD Degradation |
DOC | Dissolved Organic Carbon |
EC | Electrocoagulation |
ECF | Electrocoagulation/Flotation |
EDC | Endocrine-Disrupting Compound |
EDI | Electrochemical Oxidation Index |
ED-EC | Electro-Disinfection–Electrocoagulation |
EO | Electrooxidation |
ES | Electrocoagulation System |
F | Flow Rate |
Fe | Iron |
Ge | Graphite |
H | Adsorbent Height |
HA | Humic Acid |
HRT | Hydraulic Retention Time |
ICE | Instantaneous Charge Efficiency |
LCA | Life Cycle Assessment |
ML | Metal Loading |
MPP | Monopolar Parallel |
MPS | Monopolar Series |
n | Electrode Number |
NH3-N | Ammonia Nitrogen |
NOM | Natural Organic Matter |
NR | Not Reported |
NTU | Nephelometric Turbidity Unit |
PFAS | Polyfluoroalkyl Substances |
PFTR | Plug Flow Tubular Reactor |
RSM | Response Surface Methodology |
RT | Room Temperature |
SAEC | Solar-Powered Electrocoagulation |
SMBR | Submerged Membrane Bioreactor |
SS | Stainless Steel |
St | Steel |
Ti | Titanium |
TDS | Total Dissolved Solids |
TN | Total Nitrogen |
TOC | Total Organic Carbon |
TPH | Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons |
TS | Total Solids |
TSS | Total Suspended Solids |
UF | Ultrafiltration |
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Wastewater Type | Electrodes Information | Operational Parameters Value | RE (%) | Ref. | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Type | No. | Arrangement, Distance (cm) | CD (mA·cm−2) | pH T (°C) | Flow Rate (mL·min−1) | Co (mg·L−1) | |||
Reactive and disperse dyes | Al, Fe, SS | 8–14 | MPP, 0.5–3.0 | 1.01–4.50 | 4–10 | 50–200 | 870 | 98 | [31] |
Orange II dye solution | Fe | 5 | BPS, 0.6 | 15.95–39.87 | 5–11 25 | 350–600 | 50 | 99 | [32] |
Synthetic textile wastewater | Al | 2 | Parallel | 31.25 | 6–9 | Residence time 14 min | 2500 | 80 for color 85 for COD | [3] |
Fluorescent penetrant liquid | Al | 2 | Parallel | 0.333 | 6.5 23 ± 3 | 1.0 to 3.25 | 1500 | COD 95 99 NTU 99 Color | [28] |
Petroleum-contaminated groundwater | Al, Fe Steel | 2 | Parallel, Al–Fe, St–Fe, Fe-St, St-Al Al-St, Fe-Al, Fe-Fe, Al-Al, St-St | 2–18 | 4–11 23.5 ± 3 | Residence time 10–60 min | NR | 93.4 TPH | [33] |
Direct red 81 (DR 81) dye | Al | 6 | BP Al-Al | 20 | 7.5 20 | 166.7 | 50 | 90.2% | [34] |
Rice mill | SS | 2 | SS-SS | 5−25 | 4.98 | 50 to 100 | 2200 | 89 for COD and TSS | [35] |
Cheese whey | Fe | 2 | Screw type | 40–60 | 3–7 | Retention time 20–60 min | 15.500 | 86.4 COD | [36] |
Synthetic HA solution | Fe | 2 | Parallel | 0.5–15 | 3–7 | 1500 | 21.59 | Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) | [37] |
Compost leachate | Al, Fe | 2 | Al–Al, Al–Fe Fe–Fe, Fe–Al | 19 V | NR | Hydraulic residence time 75 min | 13,600 | 96% COD 99% TSS | [38] |
Textile r | Al | 2 | Cylindrical cathode Central anode | 2–12 | 7 25 | Retention time 10–30 min | 300 | 91.5 COD, 95.5 color | [39] |
Reactive textile dye | Al | 2 | Parallel | 10–30 | 2.3–8.8 | 15–60 L·h−1 | 300 | 90 turbidity, 97 color | [40] |
Pulp and paper mill | Fe | 2–6 | MPS | Optimum CD 5.556 | 7 | 0.5–4.0 L·h−1 | 2000 | 82.15 COD, 90 color | [41] |
Dairy | Al | 4 | MPS | 0.2–1.2 | 7.8–9.2 25 | Residence time 30–90 | 2200 | 94 color, 93 NTU 65 TOC, 69 COD | [42] |
Dye house | Al | 4 | MPS | 2–8.5 | 6.5–7.1 18–22 | 0.01–0.20 | 200 | 85, 77 COD, 76, 72 TOC 95, 95 turbidity for Fe and Al | [43] |
Textile | Al | 12 | MPS | 2–8 | 7.31 30 ±3.2 | Retention time 5–40 min | 2240 | 98 turbidity, 88 color 93 COD, 94 TSS, 52 TDS | [44] |
Tannery | Al, Fe | 10 | MPP | 7–14 | 5.5 | Retention time 25–100 min | 2500–3000 | 73, 67 COD, 94, 93 color 100, 100 Cr, 51, 46 NH3-N for AL and Fe | [45] |
Textile dye Acid Red 336 | Al | 2, 4 | MPS, BPS | 10–40 | NR | 15 L·h−1 | 1000 | 97.5 color, 98.5 turbidity | [46] |
Indigo dyeing wastewater | Fe | 28 | MPS | 0–220 V | 3–10 | 1–3 L/min | 2080 | 93.8 color, −92.07 COD | [47] |
Paint | Al, Fe | 10 | MPS | 0–5 A | 6.6–7.0 | 8 L·h−1 | 1000 | 69,7 COD, 62.1 Al | [48] |
Backwash | SS, Fe | 13 | MPS | 6–30 V | 7.3–7.7 | Retention time 10 min | 178.2 | 98.4 COD | [49] |
Licorice processing | Fe | 12 | BPS | 10–50 | 6.5 18–22 | 11–16 mL·h−1 | 1600 | 90.1 color, 89.4 COD 82 turbidity, 73.3 alkalinity | [50] |
Sarawak peat | Cu | 10–20 | MPP, MPS, BPS | 0.12–0.599 | NR | Retention time 10–37.778 | 8 | 100 turbidity 90.91 TSS | [51] |
Metalworking | Al, Fe | 4 | MPS | 9 | 7 25 | 10–200 Retention time 350–17.5 min For Al | 17,312 | 92.6–71.3 COD, 83.3–64.9 TOC 99.9–88.9 turbidity | [52] |
Synthetic colored effluent | SS, Al | Packed bed | Packed bed, particulate, and planar | 3–6 A | 3–8 | 9.4–24 L·h−1 | 140 | 98 Color | [53] |
Peat water | Cu | 10–20 | MPP, MPS, BPS | 0.12–0.599 | 6–7 | 7.1 L·h−1 | NR | 100 turbidity, 90 r TSS 78 COD, 97 TOC | [54] |
Azo dyes methyl orange | Fe | 2 | Fold plate electrode | 10–15 | 6 Room temp. | 15–105 L·h−1 | 100 | 92.35 color | [55] |
Hospital | Fe, Al | 2 | Parallel | 20–40 V | 4–8 | Retention time 10–60 min | 502.8 | 75.5 COD 59.2 BOD5 80.7 phenols 85.3 Phosph, 75.6 TSS | [56] |
Indigo dye | Fe | 30 | BPS | 20–65 V | 2.5–7.5 | 1.5–3 | 10–60 | 93.18 | [57] |
Licorice processing | Fe | 12 | Rod electrodes | 28 | 6.3 | Retention time 71.8 min | NR | 94.6 color, 90.1 COD 72 turbidity | [76] |
Borneo tropical brackish peat | Al | 10 | MPP | 0.625 | 4.74 | Retention time 5 min | NR | 94.01 color 91.43 COD | [77] |
leachate | Fe, Al | 2 anodes 12 cathodes | MPS | 1.1 | 11 | 40.0 | 75 | 59 COD, 64 TOC 55 BOD5, 27 NH3-N | [78] |
Textile | Fe, Al | NR | 1–6.5 | NR | 10–200 | NR | 95 turbidity 75 TOC, 86 COD | [79] |
Wastewater Type | Combined Process Type | EC Process | Removal (%) | References | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electrodes Information | Operational Parameters | |||||||||||
Type | No. | Arrangement | CD mA·cm−2 | pH | T °C | Flow Rate mL·min−1 | Co (mg·L−1) | |||||
EC as a pretreatment step | ||||||||||||
Industrial wastewater | ES and post-activated sludge | Al | 12 | MPS | 3.4 A | 8 | RT | 50–200 | 2000 | 94 color 92 turbidity 80 COD 80 | [58] | |
HA | Electromagnetic treatment-doubled EC | Fe, Al, SS | 2 | Parallel | 9.1–14.5 | 4–12 | 30–120 | 10–50 | 20 | 52 HA at pH 3 | [59] | |
Dye-containing wastewater | ES and post gas separation tank and two sediments | Fe | 50 | MPP | 3–4 | 9.6 | RT | 0.07–1140 | 100 | 99 color 93 COD 89 TS | [60] | |
Grey water | ES and post-submerged membrane bioreactor (SMBR) | Al | 2 | Parallel | 0.7–1.4 | 5–10 | 22.24 | - HRT 2–40 h | 463 | Nearly (100%) | [61] | |
Kaolin suspension, colored organic solution, and oil-in-water emulsion | ES and post-electroflotation | Al and Fe | 3–5 | - | 2.5 | 4–4.5 | 25 | Residence time 10–55 min- | 200 | 60 turbidity 80 COD ≥80 color | [63] | |
Textile effluents | EC and electrochemical oxidation (EO) | Fe, Al, Ge, Ti | 6 | MPS- | 1–5 | 4–10 - | -- | Retention time 29.63 min | 200–3000 | 70 DCOD 100 color | [64] | |
Landfill leachate | ES and anaerobic treatment technique | Iron | 2 | Parallel | 20–50 | 3–9 | 13–24 | 6400 | 92 COD | [65] | ||
Yarn dyed wastewater | EC and Fenton oxidation | Al | 2 | Parallel | - | 6.8 | 25 | 30–90 | -- | 80 COD 97.8 color | [66] | |
Algae cultivation | EC and flotation | Fe and AL | 2 | Parallel | 1.2 (Al)/ 3.2 (Fe) | 7.15–7.3 | RT | 10 L/h | 200 | Microalgae removal 88 Fe electrodes 73 Al electrodes | [68] | |
River water | EC and ultrafiltration (UF) | Al | 6 | MPS | 3.7–7.4 | 6 | 17 | 500 | - | TDS 72.20, turbidity 99.11, BOD5 94.35, COD 81.55 | [71] | |
Dyes | EC-adsorption | Fe | 10 | BPS | 1.3–21. | 5–11 | - | 0.5–1 L/min | - | 96.87 color 96.87 COD 84.46 TSS | [72] | |
Hydraulic fracturing effluents | EC and membrane distillation | Fe, Al | 5 | BPS | 5 A | 7.2 | 20 | 200 | 100–1000 | 42 TOC | [73] | |
Acid Brown 14 diazo dye | EC+ (photo) electro-Fenton recirculation | Fe | 2–9 | MPS | 50 | 4–10 | 10 L/h | 50 | TOC reduction 90 in chloride media 97 in sulfate media | [74] | ||
Greywater | EC, bed filter, and adsorption | Al Fe | 4 | MPS- | 0.45–1.4 | 7–8 | 0.05–0.1 L/min | 245 | 85–90 COD | [75] | ||
EC as a post-treatment step | ||||||||||||
Municipal wastewater | ES as post-treatment method for UASB reactor effluents | Al | 4 | MPP | 1–5 | 6–7 | 25–27 | 4.32–12.96 L/h | 274 | >99.8 reduction in total and fecal coliforms | [62] | |
Real urban treated effluents | Electro-disinfection and EC | Iron, diamond | - | BPS | 0.5–1 | 7–7.6 | - | 50 L/h | 6.1 | 100 turbidity 100 E. coli | [67] | |
Distillery spent Wash | EC and ozone assisted EC | Al | 6 | MPS | 5.25–10.75 | 3.1–6.9 | 24–62 | 3 gm/h | 3875 | 72 COD 92 color | [69] | |
Bio-digested landfill leachate | Bed biofilm reactor (CF-SBBR) and EC | Fe, Al | 6 | Parallel | 7–42 | 2–10 | 1.6–3.3 L/min | 1900 | 46.5, 54.4 COD 95.8, 98.5 color 83.5, 78.6 TOC 40.9, 57.9 TN, for Al, Fe, respectively | [70] | ||
EC between pre- and post-treatment processes | ||||||||||||
Dairy | Chemical coagulation, EC, and adsorption | Fe | 2–6 | MPS, MPP, BPS | 1–4 | 5.6 | 25 | 19–45 | 100 | 97.1 TOC | [25] |
Wastewater Type | Model Used | Optimum Values of the Operating Parameters | Predicted Responses at Optimum Conditions | Ref. | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Standalone EC Processes | |||||||
pH | CD mA·cm−2 | Flow rate mL·min−1 | Electrode distance, cm | ||||
Rice mill | RSM using BBD | 7 | 15 | 70 | 5 | 97.41% COD 89.09% TSS 7.24 KWh EEC | [35] |
Cheese whey | RSM | Initial 4.54 | 60 | Retention time 20 min | - | 2.112 mg·L−1 COD | [36] |
Compost leachate | RSM | Inlet COD 13,600 mg·L−1 | Voltage 19 V | HRT 75 min | 3 | 96% COD 99% TSS | [38] |
Dairy | Factorial design methodology ANOVA | Voltage 10 V | 1.33 | 1000 | 1 | 94 color, 93 NTU 65 TOC, 69 COD | [42] |
Indigo dyeing wastewater | RSM CCD | 7.85 | Voltage 101 V | 1300 | - | 89.2 color, 76.1 COD 29.76 conductivity | [47] |
Licorice processing | RSM CCD | Mixing intensity 45 rpm | 35.0 | Electrolysis time 81.8 min | NaCl concentration 300 mg·L−1 | 90.1 color, 89.4 COD 82 turbidity 73.3 alkalinity | [50] |
Sarawak peat | RSM | - | 0.3861 | Electrolysis time 37.778 min | - | 2.0247 NTU turbidity 2.8629 mg·L−1 TSS | [51] |
Azo dyes methyl orange | RSM using BBD | MO Co 134 mg·L−1 | 10.1 | Electrolysis time 30 min | - | 92.35 color | [55] |
Hospital | RSM using BBD | 7.92 | Voltage 40 V | HRT 15 min | - | 75.5 COD, 59.2 BOD5 80.7 phenols 85.3 phosphates, 75.6 TSS | [56] |
Indigo dye | RSM ANOVA | 7.5 | Voltage 47 V | 2000 | Solution concentration 60 mg·L−1 | Predicted color removal 94.083% | [57] |
Licorice processing | RSM CCD ANOVA analysis | Mixing intensity 45 rpm | CD 2.8 mA·cm−2 | Electrolysis time 71.8 min | - | 94.6 color 90.1 COD 72 turbidity | [76] |
Leachate | RSM using BBD | 11 | 1.1 | HRT 50 min | - | 59 COD, 64 TOC 55 BOD5, 27 NH3-N | [78] |
2. Combined EC processes | |||||||
Anaerobically treated municipal wastewater | RSM using BBD | - | CD 2 mA·cm−2 | Residence time 5 min | Influent COD 274 mg·L−1 | 90 mg·L−1 effluent COD 0.57 mg·L−1 phosphate 15.2 NTU turbidity | [62] |
Kaolin organic solution and oil-in-water emulsion | RSM | - | CD 2 mA·cm−2 | Residence time 20 min | Influent COD 250 mg·L−1 | 60 turbidity 80 COD ≥80 color | [63] |
Textile wastewater | RSM using BBD | 4 | CD 4.1 mA·cm−2 | Retention time 29.63 min | Conductivity of 3.7 mS·cm−1 | 70 DCOD 100 color | [64] |
Textile effluent | RSM using BBD | 8.24 | Voltage 70 V | Effluent Flow rate 0.5 L·min−1 | Clay flow rate 100 mL·min−1 | 96.87 color, 96.87 COD 84.46 TSS 0.75 $·m−3 as total cost | [72] |
The Design Innovation | Impact of the Innovation | Ref. |
---|---|---|
A single reactor for both electrolysis and coagulate settling. | High percentage removal of textile effluents. | [34] |
A U-shaped cathode and a horizontally rotating screw anode to treat cheese whey effluents. | Removal efficiency of 86.4%. | [36] |
Rotating anode with 10 impellers and 10 rings as cathodes. | Passivation reduction on the anode and increased adsorption onto the rotating anode. | [39] |
Rectangular tank EC cell for both metal dissolution and solid settling. | Color and turbidity removal of 97.5 and 98.5%. | [46] |
Vertical iron plates as anodes and cathodes, with horizontal bipolar electrodes located between the main electrodes (anode and cathode). | The use of CCD with RSM to find the optimal operating conditions leads to high removal efficiencies of 90.15 for COD, 91 for color, and 82% for turbidity. | [50] |
Fixed bed of metallic particles as anode. The Al plate cathode was of the same dimensions, attached to the back face. | Effective electrochemical reactor with particulate anode and 90% removal efficiency of dyes. | [53] |
Continuous-flow electrocoagulation (CFR-EC) reactor consists of two cylinders as anodes equipped with 12 parallel tubes utilized as cathode. | An effective and affordable EC cell for landfill leachate removal with relatively low cost. | [78] |
The Combined System | The Design Innovation | Impact of the Innovation | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Electrocoagulation—Activated sludge |
| Percentage of removal of color 94%, turbidity 92%, COD 80% | [58] |
ES | ES with gas separation tank and two sedimenters. | Recovery of hydrogen High removal efficiencies | [60] |
Combined EC-EF reactor |
| High removal of pollutants that form low-density solids during the EC stage | [63] |
New tubular EC-EF reactor design | The EC cell consists of a pair of concentric tubular electrodes:
| Effective tubular EC-EF reactor for industrial-scale microalgae harvesting. | [68] |
EC reactor and a (photo) electro-Fenton recirculation system | The electrodes were Fe rods distributed in a concentric configuration. Air diffusion cathode. | High TOC reduction, close to 90% and 97% in chloride and sulfate media, respectively | [74] |
A coagulation-based continuous tubular electrochemical reactor | Iron tube cathode with a commercial aluminum rod anode | Short treatment time, energy efficiency, high mass transfer rate, and low ohmic drop, no need to adjust the pH | [70] |
Chemical coagulation (CC), solar powered electrocoagulation (SAEC) and post-adsorption for dairy wastewater treatment | Three-step continuous treatment system with a packed bed adsorber |
| [25] |
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Al-Qodah, Z.; AL-Rajabi, M.M.; Al Amayreh, H.H.; Assirey, E.; Bani-Melhem, K.; Al-Shannag, M. Performance of Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes (CEPs) as an Efficient Approach for the Treatment of Industrial Organic Pollutants: A Comprehensive Review. Water 2025, 17, 2351. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152351
Al-Qodah Z, AL-Rajabi MM, Al Amayreh HH, Assirey E, Bani-Melhem K, Al-Shannag M. Performance of Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes (CEPs) as an Efficient Approach for the Treatment of Industrial Organic Pollutants: A Comprehensive Review. Water. 2025; 17(15):2351. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152351
Chicago/Turabian StyleAl-Qodah, Zakaria, Maha Mohammad AL-Rajabi, Hiba H. Al Amayreh, Eman Assirey, Khalid Bani-Melhem, and Mohammad Al-Shannag. 2025. "Performance of Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes (CEPs) as an Efficient Approach for the Treatment of Industrial Organic Pollutants: A Comprehensive Review" Water 17, no. 15: 2351. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152351
APA StyleAl-Qodah, Z., AL-Rajabi, M. M., Al Amayreh, H. H., Assirey, E., Bani-Melhem, K., & Al-Shannag, M. (2025). Performance of Continuous Electrocoagulation Processes (CEPs) as an Efficient Approach for the Treatment of Industrial Organic Pollutants: A Comprehensive Review. Water, 17(15), 2351. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152351