Electrolysis to reduce water's saltiness?

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Electrolysis can reduce salt content in water, but it raises concerns about the safety of drinking the resulting water. Chloride ions (Cl-) can be converted to chlorine gas (Cl2), which is toxic, although it dissipates over time. Calcium (Ca2+) remains in the solution, as electrolysis primarily produces hydrogen gas without effectively removing calcium. The process can also increase the water's alkalinity by replacing Cl- with hydroxide ions (OH-), potentially making it less palatable. Adjusting pH may be considered, but using a chelator like sodium citrate could introduce sodium while managing calcium levels. However, both calcium and sodium are essential minerals, and the rationale for removing calcium is questioned, as pH does not directly correlate with calcium presence.
Phythochem
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Hi

I wonder if we can reduce the quantity of salt (mostly Cl- and Ca2+) from water by electrolysis and still be safe to drink. I know that with inert electrods (not sure which ones although) Cl- would be trun into Cl2(g) and I'm concerned by its toxicity even though it's going in the air. But I'm don't know what's going on about the Calcium: if it can be precipitated or if I can't get rid of it and will just need to adjust the pH.

Thanks
 
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Won't work.

If you wait long enough Cl2 will be gone. However, you won't get rid of calcium this way, you will just produce hydrogen (think about it: even if you were able to deposit metallic calcium on the electrode surface it will immediately react with water, in reality water just reacts first and the net effect - gaseous hydrogen and unchanged calcium in the solution - is the same). Plus, removed Cl- will be replaced by OH-, making water alkaline and even less drinkable.
 
Oh yes I see, that's why I thought about adjusting the pH. But do you think using a chelator such as sodium citrate could help ? I mean having sodium in solution is still better than calcium in term of taste and quantity of OH-.
 
You need both calcium and sodium, not sure why you want to get rid of Ca. pH has nothing to do with the Ca2+ presence (that is, some waters can have some correlation, but it is not absolute).
 
Thanks for your answer I'll see where I can get with this !
 
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