Abstract

The nutrient recovery from source-separated urine is of great significance for a sustainable and closed nutrient loop. However, common urine-processing techniques have several constraints, including inefficient recovery, low product purity and incapability of simultaneously harvesting multiple nutrients. In this study, an integrated strategy of P precipitation and N stripping was first proposed to harvest nutrients from hydrolyzed human urine as high-purity products via precisely regulating Ca/P dosing ratio. Ca(OH)2 was utilized to trigger Ca-P precipitation and elevate pH level. Different from the previously reported conventional struvite method, P recovery was oriented to calcium phosphate. P harvesting behavior was investigated as a function of key factors including initial P concentration and the dosing ratio. A thermodynamic model was constructed to unveil the precipitation transformation mechanism and visualize P recovery for an enhanced controllability. For N harvesting, Ca(OH)2 was dosed to increase the pH of the urine to converts ammonium to ammonia. The resulting ammonia was stripped and then adsorbed by H2SO4 as high-purity ammonium sulfate. Moreover, the sulfate derived from acidification treatment was recovered as calcium sulfate in the interests of material recycling and mitigating secondary contaminations. Results exhibited P recovery efficiency could reach 100 % and purity for calcium phosphate could be above 90 % within a Ca/P ratio range of 1.67–2.0. Further boosting pH to 12, over 85 % of S and 95 % of N was retrieved. The comprehensive scheme provides an efficient approach towards the precise P and N harvesting from hydrolyzed urine and advances the knowledge of precipitation transformation mechanism.

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