Water quality is one of the great challenges of this century. Nitrate concentrations in surface and ground waters have dramatically increased during the last century due to the anthropogenic nitrogen fertilizer inputs. Drinking water with elevated nitrate levels is harmful to human health in terms of respiratory and reproductive system illness, cancer, thyroid problems, and death. The World Health Organization has set a restrictive maximum concentration level in drinking water of 50 mg/L of nitrate. Unfortunately, nitrate is among the most reported water quality violations worldwide, impacting both municipal and private groundwater wells, the latter of which receives little attention has no mandatory treatments.
Understanding that one of the main needs is point of use (POU) treatment within homes for people who rely on private groundwater wells or contaminated tap water, is a huge step. POU systems must be user-friendly, reliable, have small physical footprint, and not have waste production. For source waters being treated by large municipalities, units with small physical footprint are preferred for ease of implementation in existing facilities. This project proposes electrochemical processes, which operate at ambient conditions, do not require addition of chemicals, are compact, easy to handle, and cost-effective.
Electrochemical reduction is an encouraging treatment technology to transform and reduce nitrate. Scientific and engineering challenges lie on uncovering alternatives to reduce the process cost. Therefore, this research aimed to (1) identify promising earth-abundant elements to electrocatalytically degrade nitrate in drinking water, (2) the design and construction of different electrochemical reactors for nitrate remediation is expected, (3) to reframe research questions in context of real water matrices to deal with new challenges, and (4) to scale-up the process and understand in deep nitrate removal mechanisms.
The NITRATE project allowed to advance science, translating, and improving the technology readiness level related to the treatment of waters containing nitrate, and making it accessible to everyone.