Assessment of a hollow cylindrical Ti–TiO2/IrO2/RuO2 mesh electrode for effective treatment of hospital wastewater using a portable electrochemical reactor

Palur Manoharan, Vinoth kumar and Dhandapani, Perumal and Pichandi, Madhan Kumar and Rajasekare, Aruliah and Punniyakotti, Parthipan and Vijayaraman, Rajyoganandh Subramanian and S.M., Prasad and Kasirajan, Sudharsan and SUDHARSHAN, K (2025) Assessment of a hollow cylindrical Ti–TiO2/IrO2/RuO2 mesh electrode for effective treatment of hospital wastewater using a portable electrochemical reactor. Assessment of a hollow cylindrical Ti–TiO2/IrO2/RuO2 mesh electrode for effective treatment of hospital wastewater using a portable electrochemical reactor, 102 (NA). ISSN 0019-4522

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Abstract

Hospital wastewater (HWW) comprises a complex matrix of organic and inorganic contaminants, pathogenic
microorganisms, and heavy metals that pose significant environmental and publichealth concerns. This study
investigates the performance of a compact and field-deployable electrochemical oxidation (EO) reactor
comprising a Ti–TiO2/IrO2/RuO2 hollow cylinder anode in raw HWW was investigated in this work. A careful
analysis of the physicochemical parameters of HWW showed high concentrations of total dissolved solids (4,567
mg L 1), total suspended solids (2,836 mg L 1), COD (3,108 mg L 1), and BOD (1,230 mg L 1), The EO process
was performed at current densities 5.8, 10.4 and 15.5 mA/cm2 and maximum COD removal (92 %) at 15.5 mA/
cm2 after 10h of treatment. The compact anode possessed a crack-propagated surface morphology that is
beneficial for Cl2 evolution reaction, and flower-like scale deposits with mainly Ca and Mg phases revealed by
XRD wereobserved on the cathode, and verified by HR-SEM and EDX. The EO process effectively eliminated
both fecal and total coliforms within 60 min and significantly decreased the levels of heavy metals (Fe: 945 →
450, Cu: 732 → 345, Zn: 650 → 140, Mn: 68 → 15 and Pb: 20 → 5.0 ppm). FT-IR and GC-MS studies showed
significant degradation of organic compounds, which resulted in the reduction of toxic substances and the
production of less harmful products. The treatment is enhanced by in-situ generated active chlorine species (Cl2,
HOCl and OCl-), that oxidize and mineralize organic-matter. These findings confirm that the EO process has the
potential for effective treatment of HWW, resulting in environmental-safe reuse of treated HWW for irrigation
use and reduced the environmental footprint of hospitals

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Microbiology > Medical Microbiology
Domains: Microbiology
Depositing User: user 12 12
Date Deposited: 11 Jun 2026 08:34
Last Modified: 12 Jun 2026 06:25
URI: https://ir.vistas.ac.in/id/eprint/21166

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