Abstract

Abstract In this study, two physicochemical methods (struvite precipitation and ammonia stripping) were coupled for the recovery of nutrients from swine wastewater. Recovering phosphate (PO4-P) as struvite was first performed using three different types of magnesium (Mg) sources: Mg alloy, low-grade magnesium oxide (LG-MgO), and Mg-containing supernatant, followed by the removal of total ammonia nitrogen (TAN) by ammonia stripping using LG-MgO as the pH adjustor. The results indicated that the PO4-P in swine wastewater can be recovered as struvite with high purity through chemical corrosion of Mg alloy, whereas a very low-purity struvite was obtained using LG-MgO as the Mg source for struvite precipitation. Approximately >94% of TAN could be removed from the effluent generated from the phosphate-recovery stage by ammonia stripping at an aeration rate of 5 L air/l wastewater · min, LG-MgO dosage of 8 g/l, and a temperature of 25 °C for 180 min. Recycling the supernatant after ammonia stripping as the Mg source of struvite precipitation could recover PO4-P as struvite with a purity of 85.8% at pH 9.5 and Mg:P molar ratio of 1.2:1. The comparison analysis indicated that the optimal Mg source for the recovery of phosphate was Mg-containing supernatant.

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