MMO Titanium Anode for Nitrobenzene

Wstitanium is a Chinese manufacturer and supplier of titanium anodes. Its chlorine-evolving and oxygen-evolving titanium anodes include iridium, ruthenium, and platinum anodes. These anodes are used in chlor-alkali industries, marine, shipbuilding, electroplating, electrolysis, hydrometallurgy, wastewater treatment, and cathodic protection.

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In nitrobenzene wastewater treatment, MMO titanium anode electrocatalytic advanced oxidation processes (EAOPs) are a green water treatment technology that has rapidly industrialized in the past decade. Its core principle is that the MMO titanium anode electrolyzes water molecules to generate strong oxidizing hydroxyl radicals (・OH, with an oxidation potential as high as 2.8V, second only to fluorine). Simultaneously, it utilizes chloride ions in the wastewater to generate active chlorine species (Cl₂, HClO, ClO⁻) in situ, non-selectively attacking organic pollutant molecules, ultimately achieving complete mineralization.

Nitrobenzene (NB, CAS No.: 98-95-3) is a core chemical intermediate of aromatic nitro compounds. Approximately 85% of nitrobenzene is used for hydrogenation reduction to produce aniline, which is then used to prepare diphenylmethane diisocyanate (MDI), rubber additives, dyes, etc. The remaining 15% is widely used in pharmaceuticals, pesticides, dyes, explosives, fragrances, organic solvents, etc. It is a fundamental raw material supporting polyurethane new materials, pharmaceuticals, and defense industries. Nitrobenzene has extremely high biotoxicity and environmental accumulation. In response to the severe environmental hazards of nitrobenzene, countries worldwide have established stringent emission control standards. Currently, the mainstream technologies for treating nitrobenzene wastewater in industry include biochemical methods, Fenton oxidation, ozone oxidation, activated carbon adsorption, and iron-carbon micro-electrolysis, but all have insurmountable technical drawbacks.

nitrobenzene wastewater treatment

Wstitanium specializes in the research and manufacturing of MMO titanium anodes. Its MMO titanium anode products have been applied in nearly a hundred projects, covering industries such as dyes, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, aniline production, and explosives. This page will systematically and comprehensively explain the technical details, coating systems, application scenarios, customized solutions, and selection methods of MMO titanium anodes used for the electrocatalytic treatment of nitrobenzene. All technical data comes from authoritative academic literature, third-party testing, and Wstitanium’s internal laboratories, ensuring rigor, accuracy, and verifiability.

MMO Titanium Anode Coating for Electrocatalytic Nitrobenzene

The coating is the core of the MMO titanium anode. Its composition, microstructure, and preparation technology determine the electrode’s catalytic activity, stability, selectivity, and lifespan. For the reaction characteristics of nitrobenzene electrocatalytic oxidation (primarily indirect oxidation by hydroxyl radicals, accompanied by some direct electron transfer; the system is often acidic and has high salinity), Wstitanium offers four mature coating systems to precisely match different water quality conditions and control costs.

SnO₂-Sb₂O₅

In nitrobenzene degradation experiments, the Ti/SnO₂-Sb anode achieved a nitrobenzene removal rate of 70.65% after 1 hour of electrolysis under the following conditions: initial concentration 240 mg/L, current density 20 mA/cm², electrode spacing 2 cm, Na₂SO₄ electrolyte 17.75 g/L, and pH 5.0.

SnO₂-Sb₂O₅ titanium anodes

RuO₂-TiO₂

Ruthenium dioxide (RuO₂) possesses excellent electrical conductivity and chlorine evolution catalytic activity, making it a classic anode material in chlorine-containing systems. The molar percentage of RuO₂ ranges from 20% to 60%. Ruthenium-titanium anodes exhibit extremely low chlorine evolution overpotentials; in a 1 mol/L NaCl solution with a current density of 1 A/cm², the chlorine evolution overpotential is approximately 1.13 V (vs SCE); the oxygen evolution overpotential is approximately 1.4-1.7 V (vs SCE).

In nitrobenzene wastewater containing chloride ions, ruthenium-titanium anodes simultaneously degrade pollutants through two pathways: first, direct oxidation to generate •OH ions that attack the benzene ring; and second, indirect oxidation—chloride ions generate active chlorine (Cl₂, HClO, ClO⁻) at the anode, degrading nitrobenzene through chlorination. Using a self-made Ru₀.₇Si₀.₃O₂/Ti electrode as the anode to treat nitrobenzene wastewater, under conditions of pH=2, current density of 25mA/cm², and Na₂SO₄ electrolyte of 8g/L, the nitrobenzene removal rate reached 85%, and the TOC removal rate reached 50%.

Ruthenium-Iridium-Tin Anode (1)

Applicable to: high-chlorine, high-salinity nitrobenzene wastewater (such as wastewater from the dye and pesticide industries), chlor-alkali process nitrobenzene synthesis technology, etc.

Typical molar ratio Ru:Ir:Ti = 7:3. IrO₂ significantly improves the coating’s oxygen evolution resistance and passivation resistance, solving the problem of rapid leaching of pure ruthenium coatings in high-oxygen environments. Coating resistivity ≤ 10⁻⁴ Ω・cm. RuO₂-IrO₂ titanium anode treatment of 4-nitrobenzene wastewater, under conditions of pH=2.5, electrolysis voltage 3V, and Na₂SO₄ concentration 0.08mol/L, achieved a 4-nitrobenzene removal rate of 79.8% and a COD removal rate of 82.3% after 180 min of reaction. Applicable to: nitrobenzene wastewater in chlorine-oxygen mixed systems, and comprehensive chemical wastewater with large fluctuations in water quality.

Iridium-Tantalum titanium anode

The molar ratio of IrO₂ to Ta₂O₅ is 7:3. The oxygen evolution overpotential is approximately 1.385V (vs SCE). In a 0.5mol/L H₂SO₄ solution, accelerated life testing at a current density of 1A/cm² can achieve thousands of hours; converted to actual industrial conditions (30mA/cm²), the service life can reach over 10 years.

Iridium-based coatings have moderate direct oxidation capability, but their extreme stability makes them suitable as main anodes for long-term continuous operation. In the electroreduction of nitrobenzene to p-aminophenol, iridium-plated titanium mesh (DSA) has been industrially applied as an anode: under conditions of a current density of 1000A/m² and a temperature of 85℃, the cathode nitrobenzene reduction current efficiency is close to 100%, and the p-aminophenol selectivity reaches 83%. Applicable to: nitrobenzene wastewater in sulfate systems.

Iridium-Tantalum Titanium Anode

MMO Titanium Anode Comparison

To facilitate your quick selection, we have compiled the core parameters of four mainstream coating systems for nitrobenzene catalysis scenarios into the table below. All data are from publicly available academic literature and experimental data from the Wstitanium laboratory. Disclaimer: The data were obtained under constraints and are for reference only.

Performance Item Ru-Ir Ir-Ta Sn-Sb PbO₂
Active Components RuO₂, IrO₂, TiO₂ IrO₂, Ta₂O₅ SnO₂, Sb₂O₃, Pt, Nd₂O₃ β-PbO₂
Oxygen Evolution Overpotential (vs SCE) 1.4~1.7V 1.38~1.5V 1.7~1.9V 1.775~1.85V
Chlorine Evolution Overpotential (vs SCE) 1.12~1.15V 1.2~1.3V 1.3~1.4V 1.35~1.45V
Nitrobenzene Removal Rate (180min) 75%~85% 65%~75% 85%~95% 80%~90%
TOC Removal Rate (180min) 40%~50% 35%~45% 55%~75% 50%~65%
Current Efficiency 30%~45% 25%~35% 50%~65% 45%~55%
Recommended Current Density 100~500A/m² 100~800A/m² 50~300A/m² 100~400A/m²
Max Allowable Current Density 2000A/m² 3000A/m² 1000A/m² 1500A/m²
Accelerated Service Life (0.5M H₂SO₄, 200mA/cm²) >150h >1000h >70h >200h
Practical Service Life (30mA/cm²) 3~5 years 8~12 years 2~3 years 3~4 years
pH Operating Range 1~12 1~14 1~10 1~9
Max Working Temperature ≤80℃ ≤90℃ ≤70℃ ≤80℃
Chloride Ion Tolerance Extremely High High Medium Medium
Upper Limit of Fluoride Ion Resistance <50mg/L <50mg/L <30mg/L <20mg/L
Coating Thickness 8~15 μm 8~20 μm 5~12 μm 50~200 μm
Relative Cost Grade ★★★☆☆ ★★★★★ ★★★☆☆ ★★☆☆☆
Applicable Scenarios High-salinity nitrobenzene wastewater, chlorine-oxygen mixed system Long-term continuous operation, sulfate system, organic electrosynthesis High-concentration refractory nitrobenzene wastewater, advanced deep treatment High-acid high-concentration wastewater, cost-sensitive projects
Data Source Description:
1. Test conditions for nitrobenzene & TOC removal rate: Initial nitrobenzene concentration 100mg/L, supporting electrolyte 0.1mol/L Na₂SO₄, current density 20mA/cm², room temperature, undivided electrolytic cell.
2. Accelerated life test conditions: 0.5mol/L H₂SO₄ solution, constant current electrolysis at 200mA/cm², failure criterion: cell voltage rises by 5V.
3. Practical service life is converted estimated value; actual lifespan is affected by water quality, current density, temperature and other field factors.

MMO Titanium Anodes for the Nitrobenzene Catalysis Industry

As a fundamental chemical intermediate, nitrobenzene supports a supply chain spanning dozens of industry sectors. Wastewater characteristics vary significantly across these sectors, necessitating specific performance priorities for anode materials.

Dye and Pigment Industry

The dye industry is the largest consumer of nitrobenzene. Nitrobenzene serves as a key intermediate in the production of various dyes—including azo, acid, basic, disperse, and sulfur dyes—and is also used to manufacture solvent pigments such as Nigrosine (Aniline Black) and oil-soluble black pigments.

Dye and Pigment

MMO Titanium Anode Solution

Ruthenium-based coatings are the preferred recommendation. Electrocatalytic oxidation is typically employed as a pretreatment step to break down the molecular structure of recalcitrant organic compounds—such as nitrobenzene—and achieve significant decolorization. This process raises the B/C ratio to a level suitable for biodegradation, enabling the effluent to meet discharge standards through a subsequent biochemical treatment system.

RuO₂-IrO₂-SnO₂ anodes are used to treat wastewater containing nitrobenzene (a dye intermediate). At a current density of 30 mA/cm² and a reaction time of 3 hours, the removal rate for nitrophenols exceeds 70%, the color removal rate exceeds 90%, and the B/C ratio increases from 0.12 to over 0.35.

Typical Application Scenarios

Aniline and Polyurethane Industry

Aniline is the primary downstream product of nitrobenzene. Approximately 85% of nitrobenzene is used in hydrogenation reduction to produce aniline, which is subsequently used to manufacture MDI (diphenylmethane diisocyanate). Wastewater generated during aniline production contains unreacted nitrobenzene, aniline by-products, and other aromatic compounds.

Aniline

MMO Titanium Anode Application Solutions

An electrocatalytic system utilizing Wstitanium tubular MMO anodes processes 1,200 tons of wastewater daily. The influent contains 120 mg/L of nitrobenzene and 80 mg/L of aniline; following treatment, the concentrations are reduced to below 0.5 mg/L for nitrobenzene and below 1 mg/L for aniline.

Typical Application Scenarios

Pharmaceutical and Intermediate Industry

Nitrobenzene serves as a raw material or intermediate for synthesizing various active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) and compounds, including acetaminophen, sulfonamides, quinolines, antibiotics, and antipyretic-analgesics. Pharmaceutical wastewater often contains a variety of pharmaceutical intermediates and organic solvents.

Pharmaceutical

MMO Titanium Anode Solution

An iridium-tantalum coated mesh anode is used to treat wastewater containing nitrobenzene compounds, with an influent COD of 3,500 mg/L and a nitrobenzene concentration of 320 mg/L. After 2 hours of electro-catalytic oxidation treatment, the removal rates reach 88% for nitrobenzene and 62% for COD.

Typical Application Scenarios

Pesticide and Chemical Industries

Nitrobenzene is used to manufacture various pesticide products, such as pentachloronitrobenzene (PCNB), parathion, and nitrofen. It serves as a key raw material for producing pesticide intermediates and acts as a synthesis feedstock and reaction solvent for numerous fine chemical products. The resulting wastewater is highly biotoxic and—in addition to nitrobenzene—often contains pesticide components such as organochlorines and organophosphates. It frequently contains high concentrations of acid anions, resulting in high acidity.

MMO Titanium Anode Solution

An iridium-based, highly corrosion-resistant coating is recommended. Electrocatalytic oxidation effectively destroys the toxic functional groups of nitrobenzene and pesticide molecules. Following electrocatalytic pretreatment with MMO anodes, the biotoxicity of pesticide wastewater is reduced by 80%, and the nitrobenzene removal rate remains stable at 85%.

Typical Application Scenarios

MMO Titanium Anode Shape and Structure

MMO titanium anodes come in various shapes and configurations to suit different electrolytic cell designs, flow conditions, and installation requirements. These factors influence current distribution, mass transfer efficiency, and energy consumption. Wstitanium offers a comprehensive range of MMO titanium anode shapes compatible with the vast majority of industrial electrolytic cells and custom reactors. All products strictly adhere to ASTM international standards.

MMO Titanium Plate Anode

MMO Titanium Plate Anode

Substrate: ASTM B265 Gr1/Gr2/Gr7 titanium plate. Coated with MMO on one or both sides. Thickness: 0.5mm–5.0mm. Maximum dimensions: 1200mm × 2500mm. Tolerance: ±0.1mm.

MMO Titanium Mesh Anode

Expanded mesh (diamond pattern), woven mesh, perforated mesh. ASTM B265 Gr1 titanium mesh. Thickness: 0.3mm–2.0mm. Mesh opening: Diamond pattern, ranging from 2.5×4.6mm to 12.7×25mm.

Tubular Titanium Anode

ASTM B338 Grade 1/Grade 2 seamless titanium tubing. Diameter: Φ19mm–Φ108mm. Wall thickness: 0.5mm–3.0mm. Length: 500mm–1500mm. Features flanges and welded terminals.

Rod Anode

Rod MMO Titanium Anode

ASTM B348 Grade 1/Grade 2 titanium rod. Diameter: Φ6mm–Φ25mm. Length: 100mm–2000mm. Features external threads, internal threads, or welded terminals.

MMO Titanium Ribbon Anode

ASTM B265 Grade 1 titanium ribbon. Width: 6.35 mm–50 mm. Thickness: 0.3 mm–0.9 mm. Minimum bending radius ≤50 mm. Highly flexible. Flexible installation.

Customized MMO Titanium Anodes

Customized MMO Anodes

Available in basket, grid, disc, spiral, and other configurations. Fully customized according to your drawings. All specially shaped anodes feature integrated welding, with burr-free weld seams.

Frequently Asked Questions

The treatment of nitrobenzene wastewater with MMO titanium anodes relies on the synergistic effect of two primary oxidation pathways: First, hydroxyl radical oxidation. Anodic electrolysis of water molecules generates highly oxidizing hydroxyl radicals (•OH, oxidation potential 2.8V) in situ; these non-selectively attack nitrobenzene molecules, progressively breaking down the benzene ring structure and ultimately mineralizing them into CO₂ and H₂O. Second, active chlorine oxidation. When chloride ions are present in the wastewater, anodic oxidation generates active chlorine species—such as Cl₂, HClO, and ClO⁻—which indirectly oxidize the nitrobenzene in the water.

There is no absolute superiority; the choice depends on the wastewater quality. When the chloride ion content is low (<2000 mg/L) and a high mineralization rate is desired, tin-antimony-based anodes are preferable due to their high oxygen evolution potential, stronger oxidation capability, and higher efficiency. When chloride ion content and salinity are high, ruthenium-based anodes are superior; they exhibit high activity for chlorine evolution, effectively utilizing active chlorine for synergistic oxidation and achieving higher degradation efficiency. Ruthenium-iridium coatings are recommended for most complex industrial mixed wastewaters.

During the degradation of nitrobenzene, intermediate products such as nitrophenol, benzoquinone, and aniline are briefly formed. Under continuous electrocatalytic oxidation, these intermediates undergo further degradation, ultimately yielding non-toxic products like CO₂, H₂O, and nitrate ions.

Yes, it does. Under acidic conditions, the generation efficiency of hydroxyl radicals is higher, and the degradation rate of nitrobenzene is faster. Under alkaline conditions, the oxygen evolution potential decreases, the oxygen evolution side reaction intensifies, and current efficiency declines. However, MMO anodes have a wide pH operating range (0–14); pH levels affect reaction efficiency but do not damage the electrode. In practical engineering applications, wastewater pH is typically adjusted to between 2 and 6 to optimize the balance between treatment effectiveness and operating costs.

High concentrations of suspended solids can adhere to the electrode surface and block catalytically active sites, leading to a reduction in effective reaction area and an increase in cell voltage. It is recommended to keep influent suspended solids below 50 mg/L; for wastewater with high suspended solid content, pretreatment steps such as filtration or sedimentation should be added upstream.

Fluoride ions can damage the TiO₂ passivation layer on the titanium substrate and erode the oxide coating, leading to rapid electrode failure. If the fluoride ion concentration is below 5 mg/L, short-term operation is possible by enhancing coating density and improving underlying protection. For higher fluoride concentrations, a specialized fluoride-resistant coating or an alternative substrate material is required. We recommend providing accurate water quality data so the Wstitanium technical team can assess feasibility and propose a tailored solution.

Mesh anodes feature high porosity and a larger actual specific surface area, resulting in superior mass transfer and more thorough contact between the wastewater and active sites. For the same nominal effective area, the nitrobenzene degradation rate is typically 15%–25% higher than that of plate anodes.

BDD (Boron-Doped Diamond) electrodes possess a higher oxygen evolution potential and stronger oxidizing capability, resulting in a higher nitrobenzene mineralization rate; however, they are extremely expensive (approximately 10–20 times the cost of MMO anodes). Although MMO anodes have slightly lower oxidizing power than BDD electrodes, they offer excellent cost-effectiveness and mature technology, meeting the treatment requirements of the vast majority of industrial wastewaters, making them the optimal choice for current industrial projects.

Electrode spacing should be determined by comprehensively considering voltage, current, water quality, and pump energy consumption. For nitrobenzene treatment, the typical electrode spacing ranges from 10 to 30 mm; laboratory-scale setups often use 5–10 mm, while industrial systems typically employ 15–20 mm.

It depends on the conductivity of the wastewater itself. Industrial wastewater with a conductivity exceeding 500 μS/cm generally does not require the addition of extra electrolytes. For wastewater with very low conductivity, the cell voltage would be high and energy consumption significant; therefore, an appropriate amount of sodium sulfate or sodium chloride is added to enhance conductivity. For wastewater with low chloride content, adding a small amount of sodium chloride significantly improves degradation efficiency.

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