Claims
- 1. A method of generating halogen by electrolyzing an aqueous alkali metal halide solution in an electrolytic cell comprising a box having a first pair of spaced substantially parallel electrodic sheets enclosing an electrolyte chamber, one sheet being a positively charged electrode and the other being a negatively charged electrode, a spaced electroconductive plate extending across said chamber between said sheets, spaced electroconductive supports extending from said plate to said sheets to supply and distribute electric current to said sheets, a pair of spaced ion exchange diaphragms substantially impermeable to electrolyte flow extending along the outer side of said sheets and enclosing said box and an outer electrode on each side of the box extending along the diaphragm on the diaphragm side opposite to the diaphragm side of the electrodic sheets of said box comprising maintaining an electrolyzing potential between electrodes on each side of diaphragm, feeding aqueous alkali metal chloride to the positively charged electrode and water to the electrode on the opposite side of the membrane.
- 2. An electrolytic cell which comprises a box having a pair of spaced substantially parallel electrodic sheets enclosing an electrolyte chamber, a spaced electroconductive plate extending across said chamber between said sheets, means to conduct and distribute electric current between one electrodic sheet of said pair and said plate, ion exchange diaphragms substantially impermeable to electrolyte flow enclosing the box and extending along the sheets of said box and an outer electrode sheet on each side of box extending along the diaphragm on the diaphragm side opposite the diaphragm side of the electrodic sheets of said box and means to maintain an electric potential between electrodes on each side of the diaphragm.
- 3. The cell of claim 2 wherein the electrode sheets of said pair are metal screens and wherein a second screen of finer porosity is disposed between said each of said sheets and the diaphragm adjacent thereto.
- 4. An electrolytic cell which comprises a pair of electrodes separated by a diaphragm capable of ion exchange and substantially impermeable to electrolyte flow there through, at least one of said electrodes comprising a central electroconductive plate connected to one pole of an electric potential source, a pair of electroconductive screens disposed on opposite sides of said central plate and spaced from said plate, a plurality of electroconductive laterally spaced supports extending from the plate on each side thereof and into electrical and supporting contact with said screens, the diaphragm of said impermeability and ion exchange capability being disposed along outer sides of each of said screens and oppositely charged electrodes on the opposite side of each diaphragm.
- 5. A method of generating halogen which comprises electrolyzing an aqueous solution of alkali metal halide in an electrolytic cell comprising a box having a pair of spaced substantially parallel electrodic sheets enclosing an electrolyte chamber, a spaced electroconductive plate extending across said chamber between said sheets, means to conduct and distribute electric current between one electrodic sheet of said pair and said plate, ion exchange diaphragms substantially impermeable to electrolyte flow enclosing the box and extending along the sheets of said box and an outer electrode sheet on each side of box extending along the diaphragm on the diaphragm side opposite the diaphragm side of the electrodic sheets of said box and means to maintain an electric potential between electrodes on each side of the diaphragm.
- 6. The method of generating chlorine which comprises electrolyzing aqueous alkali metal chloride in an electrolytic cell comprising a row of box electrode elements having therebetween ion exchange diaphragms which are substantially impermeable to electrolyte flow, said box elements each comprising a pair of spaced electrolyte permeable electrodic sheets providing electrolyte space therebetween, spaced electroconductive elements extending across the space from one of said pair to the other to convey electric potential thereto whereby electrodic sheets of one box are separated from the next adjacent electrode sheet of the next box and are separated by a diaphragm and means to maintain an electric potential between electrode sheets adjacent to opposite sides of the diaphragm.
- 7. The method of claim 6 wherein each diaphragm is held in contact with and supported by at least one of the adjacent electrodic sheets.
- 8. The method of claim 6 wherein each diaphragm is held in contact with electrodic sheets on opposite sides thereof.
- 9. An electrolytic cell which comprises at least a cell unit comprising a pair of spaced parallel electrodic sheets and support means to hold said sheets apart comprising a central electroconductive plate between and extending along the electrode sheets and spaced therefrom to provide enclosed electrolyte spaces between the plate and each of the electrodes, means to impose an electric potential on the plate, means to convey said potential to the electrodic sheets including electrode supports on each side of the plate extending from the plate across an electrolyte space to one of the spaced electrode sheets, further electrode sheets extending along and spaced from the outer side of each of said pair of electrode sheets, said further sheets being of opposite polarity to that of the sheet of said pair to which it is adjacent and a cation exchange diaphragm impermeable to electrolyte flow disposed between each of said further electrode sheets and the adjacent sheet of said spaced pairs.
- 10. The cell of claim 9 wherein the electrode sheets of said pair are the same polarity.
- 11. The cell of claim 9 wherein the electrode sheets of said pair comprises a relatively coarse electroconductive screen supported by said supports and a relatively fine screen on said coarse screen between the diaphragm and the coarse screen.
- 12. The cell of claim 9 wherein the electrode sheet contacts the diaphragm.
- 13. The method of generating chlorine which comprises electrolyzing alkali metal chloride in an electrolytic cell comprising at least a cell unit comprising a pair of spaced parallel electrodic sheets and support means to hold said sheets apart comprising a central electroconductive plate between and extending along the electrode sheets and spaced therefrom to provide enclosed electrolyte spaces between the plate and each of the electrodes, means to impose an electric potential on the plate, means to convey said potential to the electrodic sheets including electrode supports on each side of the plate extending from the plate across an electrolyte space to one of the spaced electrode sheets, further electrode sheets extending along and spaced from the outer side of each of said pair of electrode sheets, said further sheets being of opposite polarity to that of the sheet of said pair to which it is adjacent and a cation exchange diaphragm impermeable to electrolyte flow disposed between each of said further electrode sheets and the adjacent sheet of said spaced pairs.
- 14. An electrolytic cell which comprises a row of box electrode elements having therebetween ion exchange diaphragms which are substantially impermeable to electrolyte flow, said box elements each comprising a pair of spaced electrolyte permeable electrodic sheets providing electrolyte space therebetween, spaced electroconductive elements extending across the space from one of said pair to the other to convey electric potential thereto whereby electrodic sheets of one box are separated from the next adjacent electrode sheet of the next box and are separated by a diaphragm and means to maintain an electric potential between electrode sheets adjacent to opposite sides of the diaphragm, the electrode sheet comprising a relatively coarse screen and a finer screen between the coarse screen and the diaphragm.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
26171 A/70 |
Jul 1978 |
ITX |
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PRIOR APPLICATION
This is a division of Ser. No. 619,014 filed June 14, 1984, now abandoned, which is a division of our copending, commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 151,695 filed May 20, 1980, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,341,604, a continuation-in-part of our copending, commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 57,255 filed July 12, 1979, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,343,689.
US Referenced Citations (9)
Divisions (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
619014 |
Jun 1984 |
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Parent |
151695 |
May 1980 |
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