EP0004191A2 - Chloralkali electrolytic cell and method for operating same - Google Patents

Chloralkali electrolytic cell and method for operating same Download PDF

Info

Publication number
EP0004191A2
EP0004191A2 EP79300369A EP79300369A EP0004191A2 EP 0004191 A2 EP0004191 A2 EP 0004191A2 EP 79300369 A EP79300369 A EP 79300369A EP 79300369 A EP79300369 A EP 79300369A EP 0004191 A2 EP0004191 A2 EP 0004191A2
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
oxygen
compartment
cathode
anode
electrolytic cell
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
EP79300369A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP0004191B1 (en
EP0004191A3 (en
Inventor
Ronald Lowry Labarre
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Eltech Systems Corp
Original Assignee
Eltech Systems Corp
Diamond Shamrock Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Family has litigation
First worldwide family litigation filed litigation Critical https://patents.darts-ip.com/?family=25387618&utm_source=google_patent&utm_medium=platform_link&utm_campaign=public_patent_search&patent=EP0004191(A2) "Global patent litigation dataset” by Darts-ip is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Application filed by Eltech Systems Corp, Diamond Shamrock Corp filed Critical Eltech Systems Corp
Publication of EP0004191A2 publication Critical patent/EP0004191A2/en
Publication of EP0004191A3 publication Critical patent/EP0004191A3/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of EP0004191B1 publication Critical patent/EP0004191B1/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C25ELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25BELECTROLYTIC OR ELECTROPHORETIC PROCESSES FOR THE PRODUCTION OF COMPOUNDS OR NON-METALS; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C25B1/00Electrolytic production of inorganic compounds or non-metals
    • C25B1/01Products
    • C25B1/34Simultaneous production of alkali metal hydroxides and chlorine, oxyacids or salts of chlorine, e.g. by chlor-alkali electrolysis
    • C25B1/46Simultaneous production of alkali metal hydroxides and chlorine, oxyacids or salts of chlorine, e.g. by chlor-alkali electrolysis in diaphragm cells

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to the operation of an oxygen electrode for use in an electrolytic cell and particularly for the production of chlorine and caustic (sodium hydroxide) in such a manner as to significantly reduce the voltages necessary for the operation of such electrolytic cells and to increase substantially the power efficiencies available from such electrolytic cells utilizing oxygen electrodes.
  • the present disclosure relates to improved methods of operation of oxygen electrodes which include utilizing a positive air to liquid pressure drop on the air feed side of the oxygen electrode to improve performance, control of the total flow of the gas feed stream to improve the mass transfer within the air feed side of the oxygen electrode at the reaction sites, humidification of the gas feed to the oxygen electrodes to reduce the drying out and delamination of the oxygen electrode so that it might function at a higher current density over a longer lifetime, and the elimination of certain gases such as carbon dioxide to increase the lifetime of the oxygen electrodes by elimination of salts which might be formed upon the porous structure of the oxygen electrode during the use thereof.
  • These methods of operation may be utilized singularly or preferably in combination to produce higher power efficiencies at lower voltages so as to produce a more energy- efficient oxygen electrode in an electrolytic cell especially suitable for the production of chlorine and caustic (sodium hydroxide).
  • Chlorine and caustic are essential large volume commodities which are basic chemicals required by all industrial societies. They are produced almost entirely electrolytically from aqueous solutions of alkaline metal halides or more particularly sodium chloride with a major portion of such production coming from diaphragm type electrolytic cells.
  • brine sodium chloride solution
  • a diaphragm usually made of asbestos particles formed over a cathets strocture of a foraminous nature To minimize back migration of the hydroxide ions, the flow rate is always maintained in excess 01 the conversion rate so that the resulting catholyte solution has unused or unreacted sodium chloride present.
  • the hydrogen ions are discharged from the solution at the cathode in the form of hydrogen gas.
  • the catholyte solution containing caustic soda (sodium hydroxide), unreacted sodium chloride and other impurities, must then be concentrated and purified to obtain a marketable sodium hydroxide commodity and sodium chloride which is to be reused in electrolytic cells for further production of sodium hydroxide and chlorine.
  • the evolution of the hydrogen gas utilizes a higher voltage so as to reduce the power efficiency possible from such an electrolytic cell thus creating an energy inefficient means of producing sodium hydroxide and chlorine gas.
  • the electrolytic cell With the advent of technological advances such as dimensionally stable anodes and various coating compositions therefore which permit ever narrowing gaps between the electrodes, the electrolytic cell has become more efficient in that the power efficiency is greatly enhanced by the use of these dimensionally stable anodes. Also, the hydraulically impermeable membrane has added a great deal to the use of the electrolytic cells in terms of selective migration of various ions across the membrane so as to exclude contaminates from the resultant product thereby eliminating some of the costly purification and concentration steps of processing.
  • the oxygen electrode presents one possibility of elimination of this reaction since it consumes electrochemically activated oxygen to combine with water and the electrons available at the cathode in accordance with the following equation It is readily apparent that this reaction is more energy efficient by the very absence of the production of any hydrogen at the cathode, and the reduction in potential as shown above.
  • This is accomplished by feeding an oxygen rich fluid such as air or oxygen to an oxygen side of an oxygen electrode where the oxygen has ready access to the electrolytic surface so as to be consumed in the fashion according to the equation above.
  • This does, however, require a slightly different structure for the electrolytic cell itself so as to provide for an oxygen compartment on the cathodic side of the cathode so that the oxygen rich substance may be fed thereto.
  • the oxygen electrode itself is well known in the art since the many NASA projects utilized to promote space travel during the 1960s also provided funds for the development of a fuel cell utilizing an oxygen electrode and a hydrogen anode such that the gas feeding of hydrogen and oxygen would produce an electrical current for utilization in a space craft. While this major government-financed research effort produced many fuel cell components including an oxygen electrode the circumstances and the environment in which the oxygen electrode was to function were quite different from that which would be experienced in a chlor-alkali cell. Thus while much of the technology gained during the NASA projects is of vaiue in the chlor-alkali industry with regard to development of an oxygen electrode, much further development is necessary to adapt the oxygen electrode to the chlor-alkali cell environment.
  • a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell having an anode compartment, a cathode compartment divided from the anode compartment by a separator and an oxygen compartment divided from the cathode compartment by an oxygen electrode can be operated by a method comprising the steps of: needing an alkali metal halide solution to the interior of the anode compartment; feeding an aqueous solution to the interior of the cathode compartment; feeding a molecular oxygen containing fluid to the interior of the oxygen compartment at a positive gauge pressure; so as to accomplish a total flowrate in excess of the theoretical stoichiometric amount of oxygen necessary for the reaction; applying an electrical potential between the cathode and anode of the electrolytic cell; removing halogen gas from the anode compartment; removing alkali metal hydroxide from the cathode compartment; and removing an oxygen depeleted fluid from the oxygen compartment while maintaining the positive gauge pressure upon the interior of the oxygen compartment.
  • a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell having an anode compartment, a cathode compartment divided from the anode compartment by a separator and an oxygen compartment divided from the cathode compartment by an oxygen electrode can be operated by a method comprising the steps of: feeding an alkali metal halide solution to the interior of the anode compartment; feeding an aqueous solution to the interior of the cathode compartment; feeding a molecular oxygen containing carbon dioxide depleted gas having a high humidity content to the interior of the oxygen compartment; applying an electrical potential between the cathode and anode of the electrolytic cell; removing the halogen gas from the anode compartment; removing the alkali metal hydroxide from the cathode compartment; and removing the oxygen depleted humidified gas from the oxygen compartment.
  • a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell for the production of chlorine and alkali metal hydroxide comprising: an anode compartment adapted to contain an anolyte containing an alkali metal chloride; a cathode compartment adapted to contain a catholyte containing an alkali metal hydroxide and divided from said anode compartment by a separator; a separator; an oxygen compartment adopted to receive an oxygen containing fluid, free of carbon dioxide, humidified, at a positive gauge pressure, and at a positive total flow of from 1.5 to 10 times the stoichiometric amount of oxygen; an oxygen electrode dividing said cathode compartment from said oxygen compartment; means for controlling the moisture content of the oxygen containing substance; means for controlling the pressure of the oxygen containing fluid within said oxygen compartment; means for controlling the total flowrate of the oxygen containing fluid within said oxygen compartment; means for removing chlorine from said anode compartment; means for removing alkali metal hydroxide from said cathode compartment; means for supplying al
  • Electrolytic cell 12 refers to a monopolar divided electrolytic cell which is suitable for use according to the concepts of the present invention.
  • Electrolytic cell 12 would generally have some environmental supporting structure or foundation to maintain each electrolytic cell 12 in correct alignment so as to build a bank of electrolytic cells for production purposes. The details of this environmental structure have not been shown for ease of illustrating the concepts of the present invention.
  • the cell itself could be manufactured from various materials either metallic or plastic in nature as long as these materials resist the caustic surroundings of the chlorine environment, and temperature characteristics during the operation of the basic chlor-alkali cell which are well known in the art.
  • materials generally include but are not limited to metallic materials such as steel, nickel, titanium and other valve metals in addition to plastics such as polyvinylchloride, polyethylene, polypropylene, fiberglas and others too numerous to mention.
  • the valve metals include aluminum, molybdenum, niobium, titanium, tungsten, zirconium and alloys thereof.
  • the electrolytic cell 12 shown has an anode 14, a separator 16, and a cathode 18 such that three individual compartments are formed within the electrolytic cell being mainly the anode compartment 20, the cathode compartment 22, and the oxygen compartment 24.
  • the anode 14 will generally be constructed of a metallic substance, although graphitic carbon could be used as in the old electrodes which have largely been discarded by the industry presently. These anodes, particularly if they are to be used in a chlor-alkali cell 12, would generally be active material resistant to the anolyte such as a valve metal.
  • a preferred valve metal based upon cost, availability and electrical chemical properties is titanium.
  • a titanium substrate may take in the manufacture of an electrode, including for example, solid metal sheet material; expanded metal mesh material with a large percentage open area, and a porous titanium with a density of 30 to 70 percent pure titanium which can be produced by cold compacting titanium powder. Porous titanium seems to be the preferred substance presently for its long life characteristics along with its relative structural integrity. If desired, the porous titanium can be reinforced with titanium mesh in the case of large electrodes.
  • these substrate materials will have a surface coating to protect the material against passivation such as to make same what is generally known in the art as a dimensionally stable anode.
  • Most of these coatings contain a noble metal, a noble metal oxide either alone or in combination with a valve metal oxide or other electrocatalytically active corrosion-resistant materials.
  • These so-called dimensionally stable anodes are well-known and are widely used in the industry.
  • One type of coating for instance would be a Beer-type coating which can be seen from U.S. Patent Numbers: 3,236,756; 3,623,493; 3,711,385; 3,751,296; and 3,933,616.
  • Another type of coating utilized is one which tin, titanium and ruthenium oxides are used for surface coating as can be seen in U.S. Patent Numbers 3,776,834 and 3,855,092.
  • Two other examples of surface coatings include a tin, antimony with titanium and ruthenium oxides as found in U.S. Patent Number 3,875,043 and a tantalium iridium oxide coating as found in U.S. Patent Number 3,878,083.
  • coatings which are available to those skilled in the art for use in chlor-alkali cells as well as other types of applications in which electrodes would be necessary for electrolytic reactions.
  • the fluorinated copolymer is derived from monomers of the formulas: in which the pendant -S0 2 F groups are converted to -S0 3 H groups, and monomers of the formula wherein R represents the group -CF- CF2 -0- ( ⁇ CFY-CF 2 - O) ⁇ m in which the R 1 is fluorine or fluoroalkyl of 1 thru 10 carbon atoms; Y is fluorine or trifluoromethyl; m is 1, 2 or 3; n is O or 1; X is fluorine, chlorine or trifluoromethyl; and X is X or CF 3 ( ⁇ CF 2 ) ⁇ a 0- , wherein a is O or an integer from 1 to 5.
  • copolymer there should be sufficient repeating units, according to formula (3) above, to provide an -SO 3 H equivalent weight of about 800 to 1600.
  • Materials having a water absorption of about 25 percent or greater are preferred since higher cell voltages at any given current density are required for materials having less water absorption.
  • materials having a film thickness (unlaminated) of about 8 mils or more require higher cell voltages resulting in a lower power efficiency.
  • the substrate film material will be laminated to and impregnated onto a hydraulically permeable, electrically non-conductive, inert, reinforcing member such as a woven or non-woven fabric made of fibers of asbestos, glass, TEFLON, or the like.
  • a hydraulically permeable, electrically non-conductive, inert, reinforcing member such as a woven or non-woven fabric made of fibers of asbestos, glass, TEFLON, or the like.
  • the laminating produce an unbroken surface of the film resin on at least one side of the fabric to prevent leakage through the substrate film material.
  • Polymeric materials can also be made wherein the ion exchange group instead of being a sulfonic acid exchange group could be many other types of structures.
  • One particular type of structure is a carboxyl group ending in either an acid, and ester or a salt to form an ion exchange group similar to that of the sulfonic acid.
  • R 2 may be selected from the group of hydrogen, an alkali metal ion or an organic radical.
  • a substrate material such as NAFION having any ion exchange group or function group capable of being converted into an ion exchange group or a function group in which an ion exchange group can easily be introduced would include such groups as oxy acids, salts, or esters of carbon, nitrogen, silicon, phosphorous, sulfer chlorine, arsenic, selenium, or tellurium.
  • a second type of substrate material has a backbone chain of copolymers of tetrafluoroethylene and hexafluoropropylene and, grafted onto this backbone, a fifty-fifty mixture of styrene and alpha-methyl styrene. Subsequently, these grafts may be sulfonated or carbonated to achieve the ion exchange characteristic.
  • This type of substrate while having different pendant groups has a fluorinated backbone chain so that the chemical resistivities are reasonably high.
  • substrate film material would be polymeric substances having pendant carboxylic or sulfonic acid groups wherein the polymeric backbone is derived from the polymerization of a polyvinyl aromatic component with a monovinyl aromatic component in an inorganic solvent under conditions which prevent solvent evaporation and result in a generally copolymeric substance although a 100 percent polyvinyl aromatic compound may be prepared which is satisfactory.
  • the polyvinyl aromatic component may be chosen from the group including: divinyl benzenes, divinyl toluenes, divinyl napthalenes, divinyl diphenyls, divinyl-phenyl vinyl ethers, the substituted alkyl derivatives therenf such as dimethyl divinyl benzenes and similar polymerizable aromatic compounds which are polyfunctional with respect to vinyl groups.
  • the monovinyl aromatic component which will generally be the impurities present in commercial grades of polyvinyl aromatic compounds include: styrene, isomeric vinyl toluenes, vinyl napthalenes, vinyl ethyl benzenes, vinyl chlorobenzenes, vinyl xylenes, and alpha substituted alky' derivates thereof, such as alpha methyl vinyl benzene.
  • styrene isomeric vinyl toluenes
  • vinyl napthalenes vinyl ethyl benzenes
  • vinyl chlorobenzenes vinyl xylenes
  • alpha substituted alky' derivates thereof such as alpha methyl vinyl benzene.
  • Suitable solvents in which the polymerizable material may be dissolved prior to polymerization should be inert to the polymerization (in that they do not react chemically with the monomers or polymer), should also possess a boiling point greater than 60°C, and should be miscible with the sulfonation medium.
  • Polymerization is effected by any of the well known expedients, fc: instance, heat, pressure, and catalytic accelerators, and is continued until a insoluble, infusible gel is formed substantially throughout the volume of solute
  • fc instance, heat, pressure, and catalytic accelerators
  • the resulting gel structures are then sulfonated in a solvated condition and to such an extent that there are not more than four equivalents of sulfonic acid groups formed for each mole of polyvinyl aromatic compound in the polymer and not less than one equivalent of sulfonic acid groups formed for each ten mole of poly and monovinyl aromatic compound in the polymer.
  • these materials may require reinforcing of similar materials.
  • Substrate film materials of this type are further described in the following patents which are hereby incorporated by reference: U.S. Patent Numbers 2,731,408; 2,731,411 and 3,887,499. These materials are available from Ionics, Inc. under the trademark IONICS CR6.
  • these substrate materials have been sought, one of the most effective of which is the surface chemical treatment of the substrate itself.
  • these treatments consist of reacting the pendant groups with substances which will yield less polar bonding and thereby absorb fewer water molecules by hydrogen bonding. This has a tendency to narrow the pore openings through which the cations travel so that less water of hydration is transmitted with the cations through the membrane.
  • An example of this would be to react the ethylene diamine with the pendant groups to tie two of the pendant groups together by two nitrogen atoms in the ethylene diamine.
  • the surface treatment will be done to a depth of approximately 2 mils on one side of the film by controlling the time of reaction. This will result in good electrical conductivity and cation transmission with less hydroxide ion and associated water reverse migration.
  • the separator 16 could also be a porous diaphragm which may be made of any material compatible with the cell liquor environment, the proper bubble pressure and electrical conductivity characteristics.
  • a material is asbestos which can be used either in paper sheet form or be vacuum-deposited fibers.
  • a further modification can be affected by adding polymeric substances, generally fluorinated, to the slurry from which the diaphragm is deposited.
  • polymeric materials themselves can be made porous to the extent that they show operational characteristics of a diaphragm. Those skilled in the art will readily recognize the wide variety of materials that are presently available for use as separators in chlor-alkali cells.
  • the cathode 18 in order to be utilized according to the methods of the present invention, will necessarily be an oxygen cathode.
  • An oxygen electrode or oxygen cathode may be defined as an electrode which is supplied with a molecular oxygen containing fluid to lower the voltage below that necessary for the evolution of hydrogen.
  • the basic support for an oxygen cathode will generally include a current collector which could be constructed of a base metal although carbon black might also be used.
  • the expression base metal is used herein to refer to inexpensive metals which are commercially available for common construction purposes.
  • Base metals are characterized by low cost, ready availability and adequate resistances to chemical corrosion when utilized as a cathode in electrolytic cells.
  • Base metals would include, for instance, iron, nickel, lead and tin.
  • Base metals also include alloys such as mild steels, stainless steel, bronze, monel and cast iron.
  • the base metal preferably is chemical resistant to the catholyte and has a high electrical conductivity. Furthermore, this material will generally be a slightly porous material such as a mesh when used in the construction of an oxygen cathode.
  • a preferred metal, based upon cost, resistance to the catholyte and voltages available, is nickel.
  • Other current collectors would include: tantalum, titanium, silver, gold, and plated base metals.
  • this basic support material Upon one side of this basic support material will be a coating of a porous material either compacted in such a fashion as to adhere to the nickel support or held together with some kind d binding substance so as to produce a porous substrate material.
  • a preferred porous material based upon cost is carbon.
  • Anchored within the porous portion of the oxygen cathode is a catalyst to catalyze the reaction wherein molecular oxygen combines with water molecules to produce hydroxide groups.
  • catalysts are generally based upon a silver or a platinum group metal such as palladium, ruthenium, gold, iridium, rhodium, osmium, or rhenium but also may be based upon semiprecious or nonprecious metal, alloys, metal oxides or organometal complexes.
  • electrodes will contain a hydrophobic material to wetproof the electrode structure.
  • porosity of the carbon material, the amount and the type of catalytic material used will affect the voltages and current efficiencies of the resultant electrolytic cell as well as their lifetimes.
  • a preferred cathode 18 may be constructed according to U. S. Patent No. 3,423,247, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
  • an electrolytic cell 12 having three compartments, basically an anode compartment 20, a cathode compartment 22 and an oxygen compartment 24.
  • an alkali metal halide solution in the anode compartment 20 as transmitted thereinto through the alkali metal halide solution inlet 26.
  • the alkali metal halide solution preferably would be one which would evolve chlorine gas, such as sodium chloride or potassium chloride.
  • Into the cathode compartment 22 would be found an aqueous solution which would be transmitted thereinto through the aqueous solution inlet 28.
  • the aqueous solution must contain sufficient water molecules to be broken down to form the required hydroxide groups necessary for the reaction.
  • a fluid containing a sufficient amount of molecular oxygen to permit the cell operational characteristics Such a substance would generally be a gas and most preferably would be air with carbon dioxide removed and humidified or pure molecular oxygen which had been humidified.
  • the reaction products such as chlorine gas would be removed from the anode compartment 20 through the halogen outlet 32 and aqueous NaOH or KOH would be removed from the cathode compartment 22 through the alkali metal hydroxide outlet 34 and an oxygen depleted fluid either in the form of residual pure oxygen or air most preferably would be removed from the depleted fluid outlet 36.
  • a pressure differential is applied across the porous cathode 18 so that the pressure in the oxygen compartment 24 is higher than that in the cathode compartment 22.
  • the increased pressure which may be zero gauge to bubble through but due to the electrolyte head may be negative absolute, assists in mass transfer of the oxidizing gas such as oxygen into the cathode 18 thereby preventing oxygen depletion in the reaction zone within the cathode 18 and leading to a longer cathode 18 lifetime.
  • This pressure differential it should be remembered is based upon the partial pressure of the oxygen present if less than 100% oxygen is used.
  • Increasing the total flow of the depolarizing gas in the oxygen compartment 24 also enhances the mass transfer of oxygen into the reaction sites within the cathode 18. This is particularly important where less than 100% pure 0 2 is used.
  • Molecular oxygen is consumed by the reaction taking place at the catalytic sites within the porous material of the oxygen cathode 18. As oxygen is consumed, additional quantities must be available continously and must, therefore, be fed on a continuous basis into the oxygen compartment 24.
  • the preferred total flows are between 0 and 10 times the theoretical stoichiometric amount of oxygen necessary for the reaction with a flow of about 2.5 times being the best.
  • Pure oxygen gas may be supplied to the oxygen compartment 24, however air may also be used since it contains approximately 23% free molecular oxygen by weight.
  • air In the case of air though, carbon dioxide must be removed from the air before it is delivered to the oxygen compartment 24. It has been found that carbon dioxide will promote a formation of certain carbonate deposits upon the cathode which sharply reduces its lifetime and power efficiencies while increasing the voltage. By eliminating the major portion of carbon dioxide this problem was also largely eliminated.
  • the evaporative driving force which causes the mass transfer of the water from the cathode compartment 22 into the cathode structure 18, causes the crystallization of electrolyte to form solids which reduce seriously the lifetime of a given cathode 18 because the solids plug up the pores.
  • the humidification of the feed gas to the oxygen compartment 24 this is drastically reduced by eliminating the evaporative driving force involved in transferring the liquid electrolyte from the cathode compartment 22.
  • a flow of carbon dioxide free air was passed into the oxygen compartment of the cell at a flow rate of approximately 790 cubic centimeters per minute which is approximately 21 times the theoretical stoichiometric amount needed when the cell is operated at 1 ampere per square inch current density.
  • the pressure in the oxygen compartment was adjusted to approximately 110 grams per square centimeter (44 inches of water) above atmospheric pressure by restricting the flow exiting from the outlet 36. The pressure was maintained at that level during the test. Electrolyte consisting of approximately 400 grams NaOH per liter was then added to the cathode compartment 22 and agitated continuously by magnetic stirring apparatusus.
  • the cathode was then conditioned by operating the cell at 60°C. and a current density of approximately 0.05 amperes per square centimeter (one- third ampere per square inch) for about one day. After conditioning was completed, the current density was increased to approximately 0.15 amperes per square centimeter (one ampere per square inch). The air flow, pressure, temperature and current density were held constant during the remainder of the test. It should be noted that these tests were used with sodium hydroxide electrolyte only and as such chlor-alkali cells were not used.
  • the cathodes were conditioned at the reduced current density because it was thought that the catalytic platinum layer becomes partially oxidized, during the period when the cathodes are stored before use.
  • the conditioning process restores the catalytic layer to high activity without causing deterioration in the quality of the cathode. Slow break-in for less noble catalysts however may be harmful.
  • the electrical connection was made on the nickel side of the cathode because it was easier to make a good electrical contact on nickel rather than on the carbon.
  • the cathode reference voltage measured versus a mercury/mercuric oxide reference electrode cell changed from -0.31 on day number 1 to -1.03 on day number 98 when the test was considered completed.
  • the lifetime of this particular cathode under these test conditions was 2350 hours.
  • a cathode test was done as described in Example 1, except that the air flow rate was reduced from 790 cubic centimeters per minute to 220 cubic centimeters per minute (approximately 6 times the theoretical stoichiometric amount necessary for reaction).
  • the reference voltage changed from -0.43 on day number 1 to -2.27 on day number 52.
  • the cathode lifetime was 1240 hours in this test as compared to 2350 when increased air flow was used in Example 1. This shows that when the total flow increases, the potentials are lower and the lifetimes are extended.
  • a cathode test was done as described in Example 1, except that an oxygen flowrate of 150 cubic centimeters per minute was used instead of an air flowrate of 790 cubic centimeters per minute. This oxygen flow rate was about 19 times the theoretical stoichiometric flow of oxygen required at one ampere per square inch current density for operation of a cell. For this test, the electrical connection was made on the carbon side of the cathode.
  • the cathode was conditioned by running the cell at a current density of 0.05 amperes per square centimeter (1/3 ampere per square inch) for about 24Y2 hours, increasing it to 0.1 ampere per square centimeter (2/3 ampere per square inch) for about 24 hours, and finally increasing it to about 0.15 ampere per square centimeter (1 ampere per square inch) at which level it was held for the remainder of the test.
  • the reference voltage changed from -0.38 on day number 2 to -0.42 on day number 293.
  • the test was discontinued on day number 293 because delamination of the cathode lamination of the cathode occurred.
  • the cathode lifetime was about 7030 hours. This again shows that when the total flow is increased in terms of stoichiometric amounts of available oxygen, the life is extended at lower potentials.
  • Example 2 An oxygen cathode test was done according to Example 1 with an operating temperature of approximately 85°C at a current density of approximately 2 amperes per square inch and a 300 grams per liter NaOH solution. Furthermore, the membrane utilized in the subject test was a standard NAFION. This experimental cell was operated using various types of cathodes. Comparative cell voltages for the different cathodes were obtained as follows:
  • Example 1 An oxygen cathode test was done according to Example 1 wherein the run was made on air which was not scrubbed of carbon dioxide. The cathode was broken in on oxygen and then switched to air, and failure occurred less than 48 hours after switching to air. This performance was typical of cathodes supplied with air which contained carbon dioxide, thus, showing the necessity of removing carbon dioxide for the lifetime of an oxygen cathode.
  • the basic conditions were as those contained in runs according to Examples 1 - 3 and the table below shows the cell voltages and reference voltage along with remarks.
  • Oxygen cathode tests were done according to Example 1 wherein the total air flow rate was varied according to Figure 2 of the drawings and with the pressure also varied. As seen in Figure 2, the cathode potential decreased with Increasing flowrates and also decreased with increasing pressures. In each case the air supplied was free of carbon dioxide and humidified.
  • the cathode tests as illustrated by the examples above were ended in each case when the reference voltage reached -1.00 or when delamination of the various layers of the cathode occurred.
  • the air (or oxygen) flow was recorded on the cathode life cell test data sheets as the height (in millimeters) of the steel ball on the Matheson number 601 flow meter (except for Example 3 for a which a Matheson number 602 flow meter was used). These readings were then converted into cubic centimeters per minute by referring to the appropriate calibration curves.
  • the examples give results of the cathode tests where the pressure differentials in the range of 100 grams per square centimeter (40 inches of water). The term pressure differential means the net pressure exerted between the two sides of the cathode.
  • the difference between the pressure and the oxidizing gas compartment (100 grams per square centimeter above atmospheric pressure) and the average hydrostatic pressure exerted by the electrolyte on the other side of the cathode (10 grams per square meter) is approximately 100 grams per square centimeter.
  • the hydrostatic pressure is calculated by multiplying the density of the electrolyte (1.33) by average height above the cathode which averaged 3 inches.
  • the useful range of pressure chterential probably is in the range of 0.25 through 500 grams per square centimeter (0.1 to 200 inches of water column). It is expected that those cathodes utilizing atmospheric pressure or where the gas compartment pressure is not allowed to exceed atmospheric pressure would be less than 1240 hours of lifetime obtained in Example 2 for instance.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Inorganic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Electrochemistry (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Electrolytic Production Of Non-Metals, Compounds, Apparatuses Therefor (AREA)
  • Water Treatment By Electricity Or Magnetism (AREA)
  • Hybrid Cells (AREA)

Abstract

Disclosed are methods of operation for oxygen electrodes which maximize the power efficiency available from such oxygen electrodes while minimizing the voltage necessary to operate such oxygen electrodes. These methods include control of the pressure of the gas feed side of the oxygen electrode, control of the total flow of the gas feed side, the humidification of the gas feed side of the oxygen electrode and the elimination of C02 from the gas feed to the oxygen electrode to increase the lifetime of such electrodes as applied to a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell.

Description

  • The present invention relates generally to the operation of an oxygen electrode for use in an electrolytic cell and particularly for the production of chlorine and caustic (sodium hydroxide) in such a manner as to significantly reduce the voltages necessary for the operation of such electrolytic cells and to increase substantially the power efficiencies available from such electrolytic cells utilizing oxygen electrodes. More particularly, the present disclosure relates to improved methods of operation of oxygen electrodes which include utilizing a positive air to liquid pressure drop on the air feed side of the oxygen electrode to improve performance, control of the total flow of the gas feed stream to improve the mass transfer within the air feed side of the oxygen electrode at the reaction sites, humidification of the gas feed to the oxygen electrodes to reduce the drying out and delamination of the oxygen electrode so that it might function at a higher current density over a longer lifetime, and the elimination of certain gases such as carbon dioxide to increase the lifetime of the oxygen electrodes by elimination of salts which might be formed upon the porous structure of the oxygen electrode during the use thereof. These methods of operation may be utilized singularly or preferably in combination to produce higher power efficiencies at lower voltages so as to produce a more energy- efficient oxygen electrode in an electrolytic cell especially suitable for the production of chlorine and caustic (sodium hydroxide).
  • Chlorine and caustic are essential large volume commodities which are basic chemicals required by all industrial societies. They are produced almost entirely electrolytically from aqueous solutions of alkaline metal halides or more particularly sodium chloride with a major portion of such production coming from diaphragm type electrolytic cells. In the diaphragm electrolytic cell process, brine (sodium chloride solution) is fed continuously to the anode compartment to flow through a diaphragm usually made of asbestos particles formed over a cathets strocture of a foraminous nature, To minimize back migration of the hydroxide ions, the flow rate is always maintained in excess 01 the conversion rate so that the resulting catholyte solution has unused or unreacted sodium chloride present. The hydrogen ions are discharged from the solution at the cathode in the form of hydrogen gas. The catholyte solution containing caustic soda (sodium hydroxide), unreacted sodium chloride and other impurities, must then be concentrated and purified to obtain a marketable sodium hydroxide commodity and sodium chloride which is to be reused in electrolytic cells for further production of sodium hydroxide and chlorine. The evolution of the hydrogen gas utilizes a higher voltage so as to reduce the power efficiency possible from such an electrolytic cell thus creating an energy inefficient means of producing sodium hydroxide and chlorine gas.
  • With the advent of technological advances such as dimensionally stable anodes and various coating compositions therefore which permit ever narrowing gaps between the electrodes, the electrolytic cell has become more efficient in that the power efficiency is greatly enhanced by the use of these dimensionally stable anodes. Also, the hydraulically impermeable membrane has added a great deal to the use of the electrolytic cells in terms of selective migration of various ions across the membrane so as to exclude contaminates from the resultant product thereby eliminating some of the costly purification and concentration steps of processing. Thus, with the great advancements that have tended in the past to improve the efficiency of the anodic side and the membrane or separator portion of the electrolytic cells, more attention is now being directed to the cathodic side of the electrolytic cell in an effort to improve the power efficiency of the cathodes to be utilized in the elecirolytic cells thus create a significant energy savings in the resultant production of chlorine and caustic. Looking more specifically at the problem of the cathodic side of a conventional chlorine and caustic cell, it may be seen that in a cell employing a conventional anode and a cathode and a diaphragm therebetween, the electrolytic reaction at the cathode may be represented as
  • Figure imgb0001
  • The potential of this reaction versus a standard H2 electrode is -0.83 volts. The desired reaction under ideal circumstances to be promoted at the cathode would be
    Figure imgb0002
    The potential for this reaction is +0.40 volts which would result in a theoretical voltage savings of 1.23 volts. The electrical energy necessarily consumed to xoduce the hydrogen gas which is an undesirable reaction of the cathode of the conventional electrolytic cells has not been counter balanced efficiently in the industry by the utilization of the resultant hydrogen since it is basically an undesired product of the reaction. While some uses have been made of the excess hydrogen gas those uses have not made up the difference in the expenditure of electrical energy necessary to evolve the hydrogen; thus if the evolution of a hydrogen could be eliminated it would save electrical energy and thus make production of chlorine and caustic a more energy efficient reaction.
  • The oxygen electrode presents one possibility of elimination of this reaction since it consumes electrochemically activated oxygen to combine with water and the electrons available at the cathode in accordance with the following equation
    Figure imgb0003
    It is readily apparent that this reaction is more energy efficient by the very absence of the production of any hydrogen at the cathode, and the reduction in potential as shown above. This is accomplished by feeding an oxygen rich fluid such as air or oxygen to an oxygen side of an oxygen electrode where the oxygen has ready access to the electrolytic surface so as to be consumed in the fashion according to the equation above. This does, however, require a slightly different structure for the electrolytic cell itself so as to provide for an oxygen compartment on the cathodic side of the cathode so that the oxygen rich substance may be fed thereto.
  • The oxygen electrode itself is well known in the art since the many NASA projects utilized to promote space travel during the 1960s also provided funds for the development of a fuel cell utilizing an oxygen electrode and a hydrogen anode such that the gas feeding of hydrogen and oxygen would produce an electrical current for utilization in a space craft. While this major government-financed research effort produced many fuel cell components including an oxygen electrode the circumstances and the environment in which the oxygen electrode was to function were quite different from that which would be experienced in a chlor-alkali cell. Thus while much of the technology gained during the NASA projects is of vaiue in the chlor-alkali industry with regard to development of an oxygen electrode, much further development is necessary to adapt the oxygen electrode to the chlor-alkali cell environment.
  • Some attention has been given to the use of an oxygen electrode in a chlor-alkali cell so as to increase the efficiency in the manner described to be theoretically feasible, but thus far the oxygen electrode has failed to receive significant interest so as to produce a commercially effective or economically viable electrode for use in an electrolytic cell to produce chlorine and caustic. While it is recognized that a proper oxygen electrode will be necessary to realize the theoretical efficiencies to be derived therefrom, the chlor-alkali cell will require operational methodology significantly different from that of a fuel cell since an electrical potential will be applied to the chlor-alkali cell for the production of chlorine and caustic in addition to the supply of an oxygen-rich fluid to enhance the electrochemical reaction to be promoted. Therefore, it would be advantageous to develop the methodology for the operation of an oxygen electrode directed specifically toward the maximization of the theoretical electrical efficiencies possible with such an oxygen electrode in a chler-alkali electrolytic cell for the production of chlorine and caustic.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a methodology of operation of an oxygen electrode which will enhance and maximize the energy efficiencies to be derived from an oxygen electrode within the environment of a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell.
  • It is another object of the present invention to provide an adjusted pressure of the gas feed to the oxygen electrode to promote this maximization.
  • It is another object of the present invention to control the total flow of the gas feed to the oxygen electrode to maximize its efficiencies.
  • It is still another object of the present invention to provide a humidified gas feed to the oxygen electrode to maximize its efficiencies. and lifetimes.
  • It is a further object of the present invention to eliminate contaminating substances such as C02 from the gas feed to maximize the lifetime and efficiency of the oxygen electrodes.
  • These and other objects that present invention, together with the advantages thereof over existing and prior art forms which will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the detailed disclosure of the present invention as set forth herein and below, are accomplished by the improvements herein shown, described and claimed.
  • It has been found that a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell having an anode compartment, a cathode compartment divided from the anode compartment by a separator and an oxygen compartment divided from the cathode compartment by an oxygen electrode can be operated by a method comprising the steps of: needing an alkali metal halide solution to the interior of the anode compartment; feeding an aqueous solution to the interior of the cathode compartment; feeding a molecular oxygen containing fluid to the interior of the oxygen compartment at a positive gauge pressure; so as to accomplish a total flowrate in excess of the theoretical stoichiometric amount of oxygen necessary for the reaction; applying an electrical potential between the cathode and anode of the electrolytic cell; removing halogen gas from the anode compartment; removing alkali metal hydroxide from the cathode compartment; and removing an oxygen depeleted fluid from the oxygen compartment while maintaining the positive gauge pressure upon the interior of the oxygen compartment.
  • It has also been found that a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell having an anode compartment, a cathode compartment divided from the anode compartment by a separator and an oxygen compartment divided from the cathode compartment by an oxygen electrode can be operated by a method comprising the steps of: feeding an alkali metal halide solution to the interior of the anode compartment; feeding an aqueous solution to the interior of the cathode compartment; feeding a molecular oxygen containing carbon dioxide depleted gas having a high humidity content to the interior of the oxygen compartment; applying an electrical potential between the cathode and anode of the electrolytic cell; removing the halogen gas from the anode compartment; removing the alkali metal hydroxide from the cathode compartment; and removing the oxygen depleted humidified gas from the oxygen compartment.
  • It has also been found that a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell for the production of chlorine and alkali metal hydroxide comprising: an anode compartment adapted to contain an anolyte containing an alkali metal chloride; a cathode compartment adapted to contain a catholyte containing an alkali metal hydroxide and divided from said anode compartment by a separator; a separator; an oxygen compartment adopted to receive an oxygen containing fluid, free of carbon dioxide, humidified, at a positive gauge pressure, and at a positive total flow of from 1.5 to 10 times the stoichiometric amount of oxygen; an oxygen electrode dividing said cathode compartment from said oxygen compartment; means for controlling the moisture content of the oxygen containing substance; means for controlling the pressure of the oxygen containing fluid within said oxygen compartment; means for controlling the total flowrate of the oxygen containing fluid within said oxygen compartment; means for removing chlorine from said anode compartment; means for removing alkali metal hydroxide from said cathode compartment; means for supplying alkali metal chloride to said anode compartment; and means for supplying an electrolyzing electrical energy to said anode and said cathode.
  • The preferred embodiments of the subject invention are shown and described by way of example in this disclosure without attempting to show all of the various forms and modifications in which the subject invention might be embodied; the invention being measured by the appended claims and not by the details of this disclosure.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
    • Figure 1 is a schematic view of an electrolytic cell for the production of halogen gas and alkali metal hydroxides according to the concepts of the present invention.
    • Figure 2 is a graphical representation of the relationships between total flow, pressure differential, and measured potential of the cathode.
    DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • Referring to Figure 1, numeral 12 refers to a monopolar divided electrolytic cell which is suitable for use according to the concepts of the present invention. The applicants recognize that various other designs for electrolytic cells could incorporate the methods according to the concepts of the present invention, but that for illustration purposes the applicants choose the present schematic to more amply describe the details of the applicants' invention. Electrolytic cell 12, as shown in Figure 1, would generally have some environmental supporting structure or foundation to maintain each electrolytic cell 12 in correct alignment so as to build a bank of electrolytic cells for production purposes. The details of this environmental structure have not been shown for ease of illustrating the concepts of the present invention. The cell itself could be manufactured from various materials either metallic or plastic in nature as long as these materials resist the caustic surroundings of the chlorine environment, and temperature characteristics during the operation of the basic chlor-alkali cell which are well known in the art. Such materials generally include but are not limited to metallic materials such as steel, nickel, titanium and other valve metals in addition to plastics such as polyvinylchloride, polyethylene, polypropylene, fiberglas and others too numerous to mention. The valve metals include aluminum, molybdenum, niobium, titanium, tungsten, zirconium and alloys thereof.
  • It can be observed from the drawing that the electrolytic cell 12 shown has an anode 14, a separator 16, and a cathode 18 such that three individual compartments are formed within the electrolytic cell being mainly the anode compartment 20, the cathode compartment 22, and the oxygen compartment 24.
  • The anode 14 will generally be constructed of a metallic substance, although graphitic carbon could be used as in the old electrodes which have largely been discarded by the industry presently. These anodes, particularly if they are to be used in a chlor-alkali cell 12, would generally be active material resistant to the anolyte such as a valve metal. A preferred valve metal based upon cost, availability and electrical chemical properties is titanium. There are a number of forms a titanium substrate may take in the manufacture of an electrode, including for example, solid metal sheet material; expanded metal mesh material with a large percentage open area, and a porous titanium with a density of 30 to 70 percent pure titanium which can be produced by cold compacting titanium powder. Porous titanium seems to be the preferred substance presently for its long life characteristics along with its relative structural integrity. If desired, the porous titanium can be reinforced with titanium mesh in the case of large electrodes.
  • Usually these substrate materials will have a surface coating to protect the material against passivation such as to make same what is generally known in the art as a dimensionally stable anode. Most of these coatings contain a noble metal, a noble metal oxide either alone or in combination with a valve metal oxide or other electrocatalytically active corrosion-resistant materials. These so-called dimensionally stable anodes are well-known and are widely used in the industry. One type of coating for instance would be a Beer-type coating which can be seen from U.S. Patent Numbers: 3,236,756; 3,623,493; 3,711,385; 3,751,296; and 3,933,616. Another type of coating utilized is one which tin, titanium and ruthenium oxides are used for surface coating as can be seen in U.S. Patent Numbers 3,776,834 and 3,855,092. Two other examples of surface coatings include a tin, antimony with titanium and ruthenium oxides as found in U.S. Patent Number 3,875,043 and a tantalium iridium oxide coating as found in U.S. Patent Number 3,878,083. There are, of course, other coatings which are available to those skilled in the art for use in chlor-alkali cells as well as other types of applications in which electrodes would be necessary for electrolytic reactions.
  • There are a number of materials which may be utilized for the separater 16 as shown in the drawing. One type of material, of course, anticipates the use of something substantially hydraulically impermeable or a cation exchange membrane as it is known in the art. One type of hydraulically impermeable cation exchange membrane, which can be used in the apparatus of the present invention, is a thin film of flourinated copolymer having pendant sulfonic acid groups. The fluorinated copolymer is derived from monomers of the formulas:
    Figure imgb0004
    in which the pendant -S02F groups are converted to -S03H groups, and monomers of the formula
    Figure imgb0005
    wherein R represents the group -CF- CF2 -0- (̵CFY-CF2 - O)̵m in which the R 1 is fluorine or fluoroalkyl of 1 thru 10 carbon atoms; Y is fluorine or trifluoromethyl; m is 1, 2 or 3; n is O or 1; X is fluorine, chlorine or trifluoromethyl; and X is X or CF3 (̵CF2a0- , wherein a is O or an integer from 1 to 5.
  • This results in copolymers having the repeating structural units
    Figure imgb0006
    and
    Figure imgb0007
  • In the copolymer there should be sufficient repeating units, according to formula (3) above, to provide an -SO3H equivalent weight of about 800 to 1600. Materials having a water absorption of about 25 percent or greater are preferred since higher cell voltages at any given current density are required for materials having less water absorption. Similarly, materials having a film thickness (unlaminated) of about 8 mils or more, require higher cell voltages resulting in a lower power efficiency.
  • Typically, because of large surface areas of the membrane in commercial cells, the substrate film material will be laminated to and impregnated onto a hydraulically permeable, electrically non-conductive, inert, reinforcing member such as a woven or non-woven fabric made of fibers of asbestos, glass, TEFLON, or the like. In film/fabric composite materials, it is preferred that the laminating produce an unbroken surface of the film resin on at least one side of the fabric to prevent leakage through the substrate film material.
  • The materials of this type are further described in the following patents which are hereby incorporated by reference: U.S. Patent Numbers 3,041,317; 3,282,875; 3,624,053; 3,784,399 and British Patent Number 1,184,321. Substrate materials as aforedescribed are available from E. I. duPont deNemours and Co. under the trademark NAFION.
  • Polymeric materials, according to formulas 3 and 4, can also be made wherein the ion exchange group instead of being a sulfonic acid exchange group could be many other types of structures. One particular type of structure is a carboxyl group ending in either an acid, and ester or a salt to form an ion exchange group similar to that of the sulfonic acid. In such a group instead of having S02F one would find COOR 2 in its place wherein R 2 may be selected from the group of hydrogen, an alkali metal ion or an organic radical. These polymeric materials are available presently from E. I. duPont deNemours & Co. Furthermore, it has been found that a substrate material such as NAFION having any ion exchange group or function group capable of being converted into an ion exchange group or a function group in which an ion exchange group can easily be introduced would include such groups as oxy acids, salts, or esters of carbon, nitrogen, silicon, phosphorous, sulfer chlorine, arsenic, selenium, or tellurium.
  • . A second type of substrate material has a backbone chain of copolymers of tetrafluoroethylene and hexafluoropropylene and, grafted onto this backbone, a fifty-fifty mixture of styrene and alpha-methyl styrene. Subsequently, these grafts may be sulfonated or carbonated to achieve the ion exchange characteristic. This type of substrate while having different pendant groups has a fluorinated backbone chain so that the chemical resistivities are reasonably high.
  • Another type of substrate film material would be polymeric substances having pendant carboxylic or sulfonic acid groups wherein the polymeric backbone is derived from the polymerization of a polyvinyl aromatic component with a monovinyl aromatic component in an inorganic solvent under conditions which prevent solvent evaporation and result in a generally copolymeric substance although a 100 percent polyvinyl aromatic compound may be prepared which is satisfactory.
  • The polyvinyl aromatic component may be chosen from the group including: divinyl benzenes, divinyl toluenes, divinyl napthalenes, divinyl diphenyls, divinyl-phenyl vinyl ethers, the substituted alkyl derivatives therenf such as dimethyl divinyl benzenes and similar polymerizable aromatic compounds which are polyfunctional with respect to vinyl groups.
  • The monovinyl aromatic component which will generally be the impurities present in commercial grades of polyvinyl aromatic compounds include: styrene, isomeric vinyl toluenes, vinyl napthalenes, vinyl ethyl benzenes, vinyl chlorobenzenes, vinyl xylenes, and alpha substituted alky' derivates thereof, such as alpha methyl vinyl benzene. In cases where high- purity polyvinyl aromatic compounds are used, it may be desirable to add monovinyl aromatic compounds so that the polyvinyl aromatic compound will constitute 30 to 80 mole percent of polymerizable material.
  • Suitable solvents in which the polymerizable material may be dissolved prior to polymerization should be inert to the polymerization (in that they do not react chemically with the monomers or polymer), should also possess a boiling point greater than 60°C, and should be miscible with the sulfonation medium.
  • Polymerization is effected by any of the well known expedients, fc: instance, heat, pressure, and catalytic accelerators, and is continued until a insoluble, infusible gel is formed substantially throughout the volume of solute The resulting gel structures are then sulfonated in a solvated condition and to such an extent that there are not more than four equivalents of sulfonic acid groups formed for each mole of polyvinyl aromatic compound in the polymer and not less than one equivalent of sulfonic acid groups formed for each ten mole of poly and monovinyl aromatic compound in the polymer. As with the NAFION type material these materials may require reinforcing of similar materials.
  • I Substrate film materials of this type are further described in the following patents which are hereby incorporated by reference: U.S. Patent Numbers 2,731,408; 2,731,411 and 3,887,499. These materials are available from Ionics, Inc. under the trademark IONICS CR6.
  • Various means of improving these substrate materials have been sought, one of the most effective of which is the surface chemical treatment of the substrate itself. Generally these treatments consist of reacting the pendant groups with substances which will yield less polar bonding and thereby absorb fewer water molecules by hydrogen bonding. This has a tendency to narrow the pore openings through which the cations travel so that less water of hydration is transmitted with the cations through the membrane. An example of this would be to react the ethylene diamine with the pendant groups to tie two of the pendant groups together by two nitrogen atoms in the ethylene diamine. Generally, in a film thickness of 7 mils, the surface treatment will be done to a depth of approximately 2 mils on one side of the film by controlling the time of reaction. This will result in good electrical conductivity and cation transmission with less hydroxide ion and associated water reverse migration.
  • The separator 16 could also be a porous diaphragm which may be made of any material compatible with the cell liquor environment, the proper bubble pressure and electrical conductivity characteristics. One example of such a material is asbestos which can be used either in paper sheet form or be vacuum-deposited fibers. A further modification can be affected by adding polymeric substances, generally fluorinated, to the slurry from which the diaphragm is deposited. Also polymeric materials themselves can be made porous to the extent that they show operational characteristics of a diaphragm. Those skilled in the art will readily recognize the wide variety of materials that are presently available for use as separators in chlor-alkali cells.
  • The third major component of these subject cells to be utilized according to the methods of the present invention is a cathode 18 as seen in the drawing. The cathode 18, in order to be utilized according to the methods of the present invention, will necessarily be an oxygen cathode. An oxygen electrode or oxygen cathode may be defined as an electrode which is supplied with a molecular oxygen containing fluid to lower the voltage below that necessary for the evolution of hydrogen. The basic support for an oxygen cathode will generally include a current collector which could be constructed of a base metal although carbon black might also be used. The expression base metal is used herein to refer to inexpensive metals which are commercially available for common construction purposes. Base metals are characterized by low cost, ready availability and adequate resistances to chemical corrosion when utilized as a cathode in electrolytic cells. Base metals would include, for instance, iron, nickel, lead and tin. Base metals also include alloys such as mild steels, stainless steel, bronze, monel and cast iron. The base metal preferably is chemical resistant to the catholyte and has a high electrical conductivity. Furthermore, this material will generally be a slightly porous material such as a mesh when used in the construction of an oxygen cathode. A preferred metal, based upon cost, resistance to the catholyte and voltages available, is nickel. Other current collectors would include: tantalum, titanium, silver, gold, and plated base metals. Upon one side of this basic support material will be a coating of a porous material either compacted in such a fashion as to adhere to the nickel support or held together with some kind d binding substance so as to produce a porous substrate material. A preferred porous material based upon cost is carbon. Anchored within the porous portion of the oxygen cathode is a catalyst to catalyze the reaction wherein molecular oxygen combines with water molecules to produce hydroxide groups. These catalysts are generally based upon a silver or a platinum group metal such as palladium, ruthenium, gold, iridium, rhodium, osmium, or rhenium but also may be based upon semiprecious or nonprecious metal, alloys, metal oxides or organometal complexes. Generally such electrodes will contain a hydrophobic material to wetproof the electrode structure. Of course, those skilled in the art will realize that the porosity of the carbon material, the amount and the type of catalytic material used will affect the voltages and current efficiencies of the resultant electrolytic cell as well as their lifetimes. A preferred cathode 18 may be constructed according to U. S. Patent No. 3,423,247, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
  • As seen in the drawing, utilizing an anode 14, a separater 16 and oxygen cathode 18 as described above will result in an electrolytic cell 12 having three compartments, basically an anode compartment 20, a cathode compartment 22 and an oxygen compartment 24. Into these three compartments in a chlor-alkali cell for instance, would be an alkali metal halide solution in the anode compartment 20 as transmitted thereinto through the alkali metal halide solution inlet 26. The alkali metal halide solution preferably would be one which would evolve chlorine gas, such as sodium chloride or potassium chloride. Into the cathode compartment 22 would be found an aqueous solution which would be transmitted thereinto through the aqueous solution inlet 28. The aqueous solution must contain sufficient water molecules to be broken down to form the required hydroxide groups necessary for the reaction. Into the oxygen compartment 24 through oxygen inlet 30 would be a fluid containing a sufficient amount of molecular oxygen to permit the cell operational characteristics. Such a substance would generally be a gas and most preferably would be air with carbon dioxide removed and humidified or pure molecular oxygen which had been humidified. The reaction products such as chlorine gas would be removed from the anode compartment 20 through the halogen outlet 32 and aqueous NaOH or KOH would be removed from the cathode compartment 22 through the alkali metal hydroxide outlet 34 and an oxygen depleted fluid either in the form of residual pure oxygen or air most preferably would be removed from the depleted fluid outlet 36.
  • In the three comjparimetn cell 12 according to the above description, an oxidizing gas depolarized chlor-alkali cell, a pressure differential is applied across the porous cathode 18 so that the pressure in the oxygen compartment 24 is higher than that in the cathode compartment 22. The increased pressure, which may be zero gauge to bubble through but due to the electrolyte head may be negative absolute, assists in mass transfer of the oxidizing gas such as oxygen into the cathode 18 thereby preventing oxygen depletion in the reaction zone within the cathode 18 and leading to a longer cathode 18 lifetime. This pressure differential it should be remembered is based upon the partial pressure of the oxygen present if less than 100% oxygen is used.
  • Increasing the total flow of the depolarizing gas in the oxygen compartment 24 also enhances the mass transfer of oxygen into the reaction sites within the cathode 18. This is particularly important where less than 100% pure 02 is used. Molecular oxygen is consumed by the reaction taking place at the catalytic sites within the porous material of the oxygen cathode 18. As oxygen is consumed, additional quantities must be available continously and must, therefore, be fed on a continuous basis into the oxygen compartment 24. The preferred total flows are between 0 and 10 times the theoretical stoichiometric amount of oxygen necessary for the reaction with a flow of about 2.5 times being the best.
  • Pure oxygen gas may be supplied to the oxygen compartment 24, however air may also be used since it contains approximately 23% free molecular oxygen by weight. In the case of air though, carbon dioxide must be removed from the air before it is delivered to the oxygen compartment 24. It has been found that carbon dioxide will promote a formation of certain carbonate deposits upon the cathode which sharply reduces its lifetime and power efficiencies while increasing the voltage. By eliminating the major portion of carbon dioxide this problem was also largely eliminated.
  • The applicants have noticed that the presence of nitrogen in the air creates problems since it acts as a diluent to thereby decrease the concentration of the oxygen present within the oxygen compartment 24 of the electrolytic cell 12. The nitrogen molecules enter the pores of the cathode 18 and must be diffused back out of the pores since they are not used in the reaction. This causes a lack of activity within the porous catalytic areas of the oxygen cathode 18 such as to reduce the power efficiency possible and increase the voltage necessary for the operation of such a cell. The applicants have further found that this may be reduced to a minimum by increasing the total flow so as to provide ample oxygen supply to the oxygen compartment 24, thus reducing to a minimum the voltage necessary to operate the cell while increasing to a maximum the possible power efficiency from such an electrolytic cell 12.
  • Applicants have furthermore discovered that evaporation and mass transfer pose a problem with oxygen cathodes 18 as shown in the electrolytic cells 12. This problem they found could be eliminated by increasing the relative humidity of the oxygen or air to be supplied to the oxygen compartment 24 by bubbling the gas through water at a temperature of 40 to 70°C. so as to produce a relative humidity in the range of 85 percent. This in turn reduces the evaporation and reduces the drying out of the cathodes which can cause delamination of the porous material from the solid support material of the oxygen cathode 18 and further enhances the mass transfer across the porous surfaces. The gas temperature as it was actually fed to the oxygen compartment 24 was generally in the range of 40 to 90°C. and therefore saturated. Furthermore, the humidification seems to have another effect. Mainly, the evaporative driving force, which causes the mass transfer of the water from the cathode compartment 22 into the cathode structure 18, causes the crystallization of electrolyte to form solids which reduce seriously the lifetime of a given cathode 18 because the solids plug up the pores. By the humidification of the feed gas to the oxygen compartment 24 this is drastically reduced by eliminating the evaporative driving force involved in transferring the liquid electrolyte from the cathode compartment 22.
  • It has been noted though that if the dew point of the gas feed is higher than the cathode skin temperature, condensation occurs on the cathode surface. When this happens, sites of oxygen mass transfer are occluded so as to decrease seriously the performance of a given oxygen cathode 18. Therefore, a gas stream dew point was adjusted to balance the two deleterious effects described above, specifically to maintain the dew point a few degrees below the cathode skin temperature while maintaining the relative humidity within a range to eliminate the evaporative driving force involved. It should be noted that higher operation temperatures lower the voltage of the cell but may shorten the life of the cathode 18. A temperature in the range of 60 to 850C. is considered optimum.
  • In order that those skilled in the art may more readily understand the present invention and certain preferred aspects by which it may be carried into effect, the following specific examples are afforded.
  • EXAMPLE 1
  • An oxygen cathode according to U. S. Patent No. 3,423,245, was Installed into an electrolytic cell so that the carbon side faced the oxygen compartment and the nickel side faced the cathode compartment in which an electrolyte was placed. A dimensionally stable anode, having a catalytic layer composed of tantalum and iridium oxides, was installed approximately 7 centimeters away and parallel to the oxygen cathode. A flow of carbon dioxide free air was passed into the oxygen compartment of the cell at a flow rate of approximately 790 cubic centimeters per minute which is approximately 21 times the theoretical stoichiometric amount needed when the cell is operated at 1 ampere per square inch current density. The pressure in the oxygen compartment was adjusted to approximately 110 grams per square centimeter (44 inches of water) above atmospheric pressure by restricting the flow exiting from the outlet 36. The pressure was maintained at that level during the test. Electrolyte consisting of approximately 400 grams NaOH per liter was then added to the cathode compartment 22 and agitated continuously by magnetic stirring aparatus.
  • The cathode was then conditioned by operating the cell at 60°C. and a current density of approximately 0.05 amperes per square centimeter (one- third ampere per square inch) for about one day. After conditioning was completed, the current density was increased to approximately 0.15 amperes per square centimeter (one ampere per square inch). The air flow, pressure, temperature and current density were held constant during the remainder of the test. It should be noted that these tests were used with sodium hydroxide electrolyte only and as such chlor-alkali cells were not used. However, the results from these tests should correlate closely with those that would be obtained by using chlor-alkali cells since the type of anode or the spacing of the anode to the cathode are not critical factors, although the anode must be stable in sodium hydroxide solution.
  • The cathodes were conditioned at the reduced current density because it was thought that the catalytic platinum layer becomes partially oxidized, during the period when the cathodes are stored before use. The conditioning process restores the catalytic layer to high activity without causing deterioration in the quality of the cathode. Slow break-in for less noble catalysts however may be harmful.
  • The electrical connection was made on the nickel side of the cathode because it was easier to make a good electrical contact on nickel rather than on the carbon. The cathode reference voltage measured versus a mercury/mercuric oxide reference electrode cell, changed from -0.31 on day number 1 to -1.03 on day number 98 when the test was considered completed. The lifetime of this particular cathode under these test conditions was 2350 hours.
  • EXAMPLE 2
  • A cathode test was done as described in Example 1, except that the air flow rate was reduced from 790 cubic centimeters per minute to 220 cubic centimeters per minute (approximately 6 times the theoretical stoichiometric amount necessary for reaction). The reference voltage changed from -0.43 on day number 1 to -2.27 on day number 52. The cathode lifetime was 1240 hours in this test as compared to 2350 when increased air flow was used in Example 1. This shows that when the total flow increases, the potentials are lower and the lifetimes are extended.
  • EXAMPLE 3
  • A cathode test was done as described in Example 1, except that an oxygen flowrate of 150 cubic centimeters per minute was used instead of an air flowrate of 790 cubic centimeters per minute. This oxygen flow rate was about 19 times the theoretical stoichiometric flow of oxygen required at one ampere per square inch current density for operation of a cell. For this test, the electrical connection was made on the carbon side of the cathode. The cathode was conditioned by running the cell at a current density of 0.05 amperes per square centimeter (1/3 ampere per square inch) for about 24Y2 hours, increasing it to 0.1 ampere per square centimeter (2/3 ampere per square inch) for about 24 hours, and finally increasing it to about 0.15 ampere per square centimeter (1 ampere per square inch) at which level it was held for the remainder of the test. The reference voltage changed from -0.38 on day number 2 to -0.42 on day number 293. The test was discontinued on day number 293 because delamination of the cathode lamination of the cathode occurred. The cathode lifetime was about 7030 hours. This again shows that when the total flow is increased in terms of stoichiometric amounts of available oxygen, the life is extended at lower potentials.
  • EXAMPLE 4
  • An oxygen cathode test was done according to Example 1 with an operating temperature of approximately 85°C at a current density of approximately 2 amperes per square inch and a 300 grams per liter NaOH solution. Furthermore, the membrane utilized in the subject test was a standard NAFION. This experimental cell was operated using various types of cathodes. Comparative cell voltages for the different cathodes were obtained as follows:
    Figure imgb0008
  • . As can be seen from the results above each of these subject cathodes when compared to a standard hydrogen evoluting steel mesh cathode shows superior performance utilizing the methods of the present invention.
  • EXAMPLE 5
  • An oxygen cathode test was done according to Example 1 wherein the run was made on air which was not scrubbed of carbon dioxide. The cathode was broken in on oxygen and then switched to air, and failure occurred less than 48 hours after switching to air. This performance was typical of cathodes supplied with air which contained carbon dioxide, thus, showing the necessity of removing carbon dioxide for the lifetime of an oxygen cathode. The basic conditions were as those contained in runs according to Examples 1 - 3 and the table below shows the cell voltages and reference voltage along with remarks.
    Figure imgb0009
  • EXAMPLES 6 to 12
  • Oxygen cathode tests were done according to Example 1 wherein the total air flow rate was varied according to Figure 2 of the drawings and with the pressure also varied. As seen in Figure 2, the cathode potential decreased with Increasing flowrates and also decreased with increasing pressures. In each case the air supplied was free of carbon dioxide and humidified.
  • The cathode tests as illustrated by the examples above were ended in each case when the reference voltage reached -1.00 or when delamination of the various layers of the cathode occurred. The air (or oxygen) flow was recorded on the cathode life cell test data sheets as the height (in millimeters) of the steel ball on the Matheson number 601 flow meter (except for Example 3 for a which a Matheson number 602 flow meter was used). These readings were then converted into cubic centimeters per minute by referring to the appropriate calibration curves. The examples give results of the cathode tests where the pressure differentials in the range of 100 grams per square centimeter (40 inches of water). The term pressure differential means the net pressure exerted between the two sides of the cathode. In this case the difference between the pressure and the oxidizing gas compartment (100 grams per square centimeter above atmospheric pressure) and the average hydrostatic pressure exerted by the electrolyte on the other side of the cathode (10 grams per square meter) is approximately 100 grams per square centimeter. The hydrostatic pressure is calculated by multiplying the density of the electrolyte (1.33) by average height above the cathode which averaged 3 inches. According to an estimate, the useful range of pressure chterential probably is in the range of 0.25 through 500 grams per square centimeter (0.1 to 200 inches of water column). It is expected that those cathodes utilizing atmospheric pressure or where the gas compartment pressure is not allowed to exceed atmospheric pressure would be less than 1240 hours of lifetime obtained in Example 2 for instance. It should be noted, however, that all the examples give the results of tests using NaOH electrolyte only, chlor-alkali cells were not used since no porous cathodes are in commercial use to date. All the above-described tests were conducted at 1 ampere per square inch which was selected for test purposes only for standardization and should not be considered a maximum possible value. It is expected that current densities of the range of 2 amperes per square inch or higher could be used. The tests as illustrated by Example 1 - 3 were conducted at 60°C, this temperature being chosen simply as a convenient temperature for which standardization can be established.
  • Thus, it should be apparent from the foregoing description of the preferred embodiments that the methods for operation of an oxygen air cathode in an electrolytic cell herein shown and described accomplishes the objects of the invention and solves the problems attendant to such methodology for use in a production chlor-alkali electrolytic cell utilizing an oxygen cathode.

Claims (13)

1. A method for operating a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell having an anode compartment, a' cathode compartment divided from the anode compartment by a separator and an oxygen compartment divided from the cathode compartment by an oxygen electrode comprising the steps of: feeding an alkali metal halide solution to the interior of the anode compartment; feeding an aqueous solution to the interior of the cathode compartment; feeding a molecular oxygen containing fluid to the interior of the oxygen compartment at a positive gauge pressure; so as to accomplish a total flowrate in excess of the theoretical stoichiometric amount of oxygen necessary for the reaction; applying an electrical potential between the cathode and anode of the electrolytic cell; removing halogen gas from the anode compartment; removing alkali metal hydroxide from the cathode compartment; and removing an oxygen depleted fluid from the oxygen compartment while maintaining the positive gauge pressure upon the interior of the oxygen compartment.
2. A method according to claim 1 wherein the positive gauge pressure is in the range of 0.25 to 500 grams per square centimeter (0.1 to 200 inches of H2 0).
3. A method according to claim 2 wherein the positive gauge pressure is in the preferred range of 5 to 250 grams per square centimeter (2 to 100 inches of H20).
4. A method according to claim 3 wherein the positive gauge pressure is in the most preferred range of 100 to 200 grams per square centimeter (40 to 80 inches of H20).
5. A method according to claim 1 wherein the total flowrate is in the range of 1.5 to 10 times the theoretical stoichiometric amount of oxygen.
6. A method according to claim 5 wherein the total flowrate is in the preferred range of 1.5 to 5 times the theoretical stoichiometric amount of oxygen.
7. A method according to claim 1 wherein the oxygen containing fluid is air with carbon dioxide removed.
8.
Figure imgb0010
for operating a chlor-alkali electrolytic cell having an anode compartment, a cathode compartment divided from the anode compartment by a separator and an oxygen compartment divided from the cathode compartment by an oxygen electrode comprising the steps of: feeding alkali metal halide solution to the interior of the anode compartment; feeding an aqueous solution to the interior of the cathode compartment; feeding a molecular oxygen containing carbon dioxide depleted gas having a high humidity content to the interior of the oxygen compartment; applying an electrical potential between the cathode and anode of the electrolytic cell; removing the halogen gas from the anode compartment; removing the alkali metal hydroxide from the cathode compartment; and removing the oxygen depleted humidified gas from the oxygen compartment.
9. A method according to claim 8 wherein the oxygen containing gas having a high humidity is saturated at 40 to 70°C. and is fed to the oxygen compartment while in the temperature range of 40 to 90°C.
10. A chlor-alkali electrolytic cell for the production of chlorine and alkali metal hydroxide comprising: an anode compartment adapted to contain an anolyte containing an alkali metal chloride; a cathode compartment adapted to contain a catholyte containing an alkali metal hydroxide and divided from said anode compartment by a separator; a separator; an oxygen compartment adopted to receive an oxygen containing fluid free of carbon dioxide, humidified, at a positive gauge pressure, and at a positive total flow of from 1.5 to 10 times the stoichiometric amount of oxygen; an oxygen electrode dividing said cathode compartment from said oxygen compartment; means for controlling the moisture content of the oxygen containing substance; means for controlling the pressure of the oxygen containing substance within said oxygen compartment; means for controlling the total flowrate of the oxygen containing fluid within said oxygen compartment; means for removing chlorine from said anode compartment; means for removing alkali metal hydroxide from said cathode compartment; means for supplying alkali metal chloride to said anode compartment; and means for supplying an electrolyzing electrical energy to said anode and said cathode.
11. An electrolytic cell according to claim 10 wherein said separator is a diaphragm.
12. An electrolytic cell according to claim 10 wherein said separator is a cation exchange membrane.
13. An electrolytic cell according to claim 12 wherein said cation exchange membrane is NAFION.
EP79300369A 1978-03-13 1979-03-09 Chloralkali electrolytic cell and method for operating same Expired EP0004191B1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US88575478A 1978-03-13 1978-03-13
US885754 1978-03-13

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0004191A2 true EP0004191A2 (en) 1979-09-19
EP0004191A3 EP0004191A3 (en) 1979-10-31
EP0004191B1 EP0004191B1 (en) 1982-05-05

Family

ID=25387618

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP79300369A Expired EP0004191B1 (en) 1978-03-13 1979-03-09 Chloralkali electrolytic cell and method for operating same

Country Status (16)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0004191B1 (en)
JP (1) JPS54132498A (en)
AU (1) AU529294B2 (en)
BR (1) BR7901504A (en)
CA (1) CA1155792A (en)
DD (1) DD142456A5 (en)
DE (1) DE2962670D1 (en)
ES (1) ES478598A1 (en)
IL (1) IL56855A (en)
IN (1) IN152982B (en)
MX (1) MX154417A (en)
NO (1) NO153224C (en)
PL (1) PL116783B2 (en)
SU (1) SU860711A1 (en)
YU (1) YU58579A (en)
ZA (1) ZA791153B (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2168079A (en) * 1984-12-10 1986-06-11 United Technologies Corp Use of gas depolarized anodes for the electrochemical production of adiponitrile
US6627662B2 (en) 1995-10-10 2003-09-30 William John Louis, Austin And Repatriation Medical Centre 3-amino-propoxyphenyl derivatives (I)

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3420483A1 (en) * 1984-06-01 1985-12-05 Hoechst Ag, 6230 Frankfurt BIPOLAR ELECTROLYSIS WITH GAS DIFFUSION CATHODE
PL409557A1 (en) 2014-09-22 2016-03-29 Ori-Med Spółka Z Ograniczoną Odpowiedzialnością Orthopedic chair, preferably for rehabilitation of scolioses
DE102015014515A1 (en) * 2015-11-11 2017-05-11 Dräger Safety AG & Co. KGaA Electrolyte conductor, method for producing an electrolyte conductor and an electrochemical gas sensor and a gas meter with such

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2681887A (en) * 1950-02-03 1954-06-22 Diamond Alkali Co Electrolytic cell
GB832196A (en) * 1955-01-21 1960-04-06 Jean Billiter Electrolytic processes
US3775272A (en) * 1972-02-25 1973-11-27 Olin Corp Mercury diaphragm chlor-alkali cell and process for decomposing alkali metal halides
US3923628A (en) * 1973-05-18 1975-12-02 Dow Chemical Co Diaphragm cell chlorine production
US3926769A (en) * 1973-05-18 1975-12-16 Dow Chemical Co Diaphragm cell chlorine production
JPS52124496A (en) * 1976-04-14 1977-10-19 Japan Storage Battery Co Ltd Method of electrolyzing alkali metal chloride and apparatus therefor

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2681887A (en) * 1950-02-03 1954-06-22 Diamond Alkali Co Electrolytic cell
GB832196A (en) * 1955-01-21 1960-04-06 Jean Billiter Electrolytic processes
US3775272A (en) * 1972-02-25 1973-11-27 Olin Corp Mercury diaphragm chlor-alkali cell and process for decomposing alkali metal halides
US3923628A (en) * 1973-05-18 1975-12-02 Dow Chemical Co Diaphragm cell chlorine production
US3926769A (en) * 1973-05-18 1975-12-16 Dow Chemical Co Diaphragm cell chlorine production
JPS52124496A (en) * 1976-04-14 1977-10-19 Japan Storage Battery Co Ltd Method of electrolyzing alkali metal chloride and apparatus therefor

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
CHEMICAL ABSTRACTS, Vol. 88, 23rd January 1978, Columbus, Ohio, (USA) FUJITA, YUKO et al.: "Electrolysis of alkali chloride and the apparatus", Page 421, Abstract Nr. 29364n; & JP-A-52 124 496 (FUJITA) (19-10-1977) *

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2168079A (en) * 1984-12-10 1986-06-11 United Technologies Corp Use of gas depolarized anodes for the electrochemical production of adiponitrile
US6627662B2 (en) 1995-10-10 2003-09-30 William John Louis, Austin And Repatriation Medical Centre 3-amino-propoxyphenyl derivatives (I)
US7129379B2 (en) 1995-10-10 2006-10-31 William John Louis, Austin And Repatriation Medical Centre 3-amino-propoxphenyl derivatives (l)

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
SU860711A1 (en) 1981-08-30
DE2962670D1 (en) 1982-06-24
NO153224B (en) 1985-10-28
DD142456A5 (en) 1980-06-25
BR7901504A (en) 1979-10-09
MX154417A (en) 1987-08-14
PL116783B2 (en) 1981-06-30
NO790819L (en) 1979-09-14
JPS54132498A (en) 1979-10-15
AU529294B2 (en) 1983-06-02
YU58579A (en) 1983-01-21
EP0004191B1 (en) 1982-05-05
CA1155792A (en) 1983-10-25
EP0004191A3 (en) 1979-10-31
ES478598A1 (en) 1980-06-16
AU4504779A (en) 1979-09-20
IN152982B (en) 1984-05-19
IL56855A0 (en) 1979-05-31
PL214074A1 (en) 1980-03-24
ZA791153B (en) 1980-03-26
NO153224C (en) 1986-02-05
IL56855A (en) 1982-07-30

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4221644A (en) Air-depolarized chlor-alkali cell operation methods
US4224121A (en) Production of halogens by electrolysis of alkali metal halides in an electrolysis cell having catalytic electrodes bonded to the surface of a solid polymer electrolyte membrane
US4212714A (en) Electrolysis of alkali metal halides in a three compartment cell with self-pressurized buffer compartment
JP3553775B2 (en) Electrolyzer using gas diffusion electrode
US5106465A (en) Electrochemical process for producing chlorine dioxide solutions from chlorites
US5084149A (en) Electrolytic process for producing chlorine dioxide
US5437771A (en) Electrolytic cell and processes for producing alkali hydroxide and hydrogen peroxide
US4486276A (en) Method for suppressing hydrogen formation in an electrolytic cell
US4455203A (en) Process for the electrolytic production of hydrogen peroxide
IL40630A (en) Electrolytic production of high purity alkali metal hydroxide
WO1991009158A1 (en) Electrochemical process for producing chlorine dioxide solutions from chlorites
JPH05504170A (en) Electrochemical production method of chloric acid/alkali metal chlorate mixture
US5565082A (en) Brine electrolysis and electrolytic cell therefor
US4969981A (en) Cell and method of operating a liquid-gas electrochemical cell
US4578159A (en) Electrolysis of alkali metal chloride brine in catholyteless membrane cells employing an oxygen consuming cathode
US20050011753A1 (en) Low energy chlorate electrolytic cell and process
US4749452A (en) Multi-layer electrode membrane-assembly and electrolysis process using same
US4956061A (en) Production of halogens by electrolysis of alkali metal halides in an electrolysis cell having catalytic electrodes bonded to the surface of a solid polymer electrolyte membrane
GB1586717A (en) Continuous manufacture of dithionite solutions by cathodic reduction
EP0004191B1 (en) Chloralkali electrolytic cell and method for operating same
EP0008232B1 (en) Oxygen electrode rejuvenation methods
JPH1081987A (en) Gas diffusion cathode and brine electrolyzing cell using this gas diffusion cathode
CA1338634C (en) Cell and method of operating a liquid-gas electrochemical cell
US4056448A (en) Process for brine membrane cell operation with external caustic and nacl concentration control
JP3553781B2 (en) Electrolysis method using gas diffusion cathode

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PUAI Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012

PUAL Search report despatched

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009013

AK Designated contracting states

Designated state(s): BE CH DE FR GB IT NL SE

AK Designated contracting states

Designated state(s): BE CH DE FR GB IT NL SE

17P Request for examination filed
ITF It: translation for a ep patent filed

Owner name: BARZANO' E ZANARDO ROMA S.P.A.

GRAA (expected) grant

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009210

AK Designated contracting states

Designated state(s): BE CH DE FR GB IT NL SE

REF Corresponds to:

Ref document number: 2962670

Country of ref document: DE

Date of ref document: 19820624

PLBI Opposition filed

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009260

PLBI Opposition filed

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009260

26 Opposition filed

Opponent name: HOECHST AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT, FRANKFURT

Effective date: 19830131

26 Opposition filed

Opponent name: THE DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY

Effective date: 19830204

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: FR

Payment date: 19840203

Year of fee payment: 6

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: SE

Payment date: 19840331

Year of fee payment: 6

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: CH

Payment date: 19840409

Year of fee payment: 6

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: DE

Payment date: 19840419

Year of fee payment: 6

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: BE

Payment date: 19840630

Year of fee payment: 6

REG Reference to a national code

Ref country code: CH

Ref legal event code: PUE

Owner name: ELTECH SYSTEMS CORPORATION

ITPR It: changes in ownership of a european patent

Owner name: CAMBIO RAGIONE SOCIALE;DIAMOND SHAMROCK CHEMICALS

PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: NL

Payment date: 19850319

Year of fee payment: 7

NLS Nl: assignments of ep-patents

Owner name: ELTECH SYSTEMS CORPORATION TE BOCA RATON, FLORIDA,

RAP2 Party data changed (patent owner data changed or rights of a patent transferred)

Owner name: ELTECH SYSTEMS CORPORATION

REG Reference to a national code

Ref country code: FR

Ref legal event code: TP

PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: GB

Effective date: 19860309

PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

Ref country code: SE

Effective date: 19860310

ITPR It: changes in ownership of a european patent

Owner name: CESSIONE;ELTECH SYSTEMS CORPORATION

RDAG Patent revoked

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009271

STAA Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent

Free format text: STATUS: PATENT REVOKED

27W Patent revoked

Effective date: 19860623

NLR2 Nl: decision of opposition
REG Reference to a national code

Ref country code: CH

Ref legal event code: PL

GBPC Gb: european patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee
REG Reference to a national code

Ref country code: FR

Ref legal event code: ST

BERE Be: lapsed

Owner name: ELTECH SYSTEMS CORP.

Effective date: 19870331

EUG Se: european patent has lapsed

Ref document number: 79300369.0

Effective date: 19870223