Abstract

Sludge produced from wastewater treatment has little to no value and is typically treated through volume reduction techniques, such as dewatering, thickening, or digestion. However, these methods inherently increase heavy metal concentrations, which makes the sludge unsuitable for land spreading and difficult to dispose of, owing to strict legal requirements/regulations concerning these metals. We addressed this problem, for the first time, by using recyclable low-cost protic ionic liquids to complex these toxic metals through a chemical fractionation process. Sewage sludge samples collected from wastewater plants in the UK were heated with methylimidazolium chloride ([Hmim]Cl, triethylammonium hydrogen sulfate ([TEA][HSO4]) and dimethylbutylammonium hydrogen sulfate ([DMBA][HSO4]) under various operating temperatures, times and solids loadings to separate the sludge from its metal contaminants. Analysis of the residual solid product and metal-rich ionic liquid liquor using inductively coupled plasma-emission spectrometry showed that [Hmim]Cl extracted >90% of CdII, NiII, ZnII, and PbII without altering the phosphorus content, while other toxic metals such as CrIII, CrVI and AsIII were more readily removed (>80%) with [TEA][HSO4]. We test the recyclability of [Hmim]Cl, showing insignificant efficiency losses over 6 cycles and discuss the possibilities of using electrochemical deposition to prevent the buildup of metal in the IL. This approach opens up new avenues for sewage sludge valorization, including potential applications in emulsion fuels or fertilizer development, accessed by techno-economic analysis.

Highlights

  • Owing to rapidly increasing global population and urbanization, there has been a significant increase in wastewater production.[1]

  • We demonstrate, for the first time, the use of ultra-low-cost protic ionic liquids (PILs),[27] which can be synthesized by an acid−base neutralization reaction, for the extraction of heavy metals from sewage sludge

  • Three types of ILs were synthesized for these experiments: 1-methylimidazolium chloride ([Hmim]Cl), triethylammonium hydrogen sulfate ([TEA][HSO4]), and dimethylbutylammonium hydrogen sulfate ([DMBA][HSO4]) using established procedures, and the formation of the IL was verified using NMR spectroscopy; see the Supporting Information (SI) for further details

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Summary

Introduction

Owing to rapidly increasing global population and urbanization, there has been a significant increase in wastewater production.[1].

Results
Conclusion
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