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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
In this work a first attempt was carried out to recover phosphorus from the organic fraction of municipal solid
waste (OFMSW) and to transform it into a fertilizer. Recovery of phosphorus was carried out by the electrodialytic process combined with struvite formation. Experiments were carried out in an electrodialytic cell, using either distilled water or nitric acid, and extraction times ranged from 1 to 16 days. During these experiments phosphorus was solubilised from a real industrial waste and separated from metal contaminants using electromigration. The extraction step was then followed by batch chemical precipitation tests to yield struvite.
Phosphorus extraction from the waste was up to 43% in the electrodialytic treatment and its precipitation as
struvite reached efficiencies close to 100%. The electrodialytic process effectively separated Ca, Cd, Pb, and Cu from the phosphorus fraction, but was not as effective in separating Zn. Struvite still contained 0.6–1.4 g kg−1 of Zn, which restricted its agronomic application to some cultures.
This works shows that phosphorus can be extracted from digestate of OFMSW using the electrodialytic
process and afterwards can be precipitated as struvite, a slow release fertilizer. Despite this work being only a
first attempt to recover phosphorus from digestate of OFMSW and still requires optimisation, the potential of the
process was demonstrated, which means digestate of OFMSW currently represents a so far under-explored
secondary source of phosphorus
Description
Keywords
Digestate of OFMSW Electrodialytic process Municipal solid waste Phosphorus recovery Struvite Urban mining
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier
