Abstract

Key nutrients, such as nitrogen measured as total ammonium nitrogen (TAN), could be recycled from hydrolysed human urine back to fertiliser use. Bioelectrochemical systems (BESs) are an interesting, low-energy option for realising this. However, the high TAN concentration (>5 g/L) and pH (>9) of hydrolysed urine can inhibit microbial growth and hinder the enrichment of an electroactive biofilm at the anode. This study investigated a new strategy for bioanode inoculation by mixing real hydrolysed urine with thickened waste activated sludge (TWAS) from a municipal wastewater treatment plant at different volumetric ratios. The addition of TWAS diluted the high TAN concentration of hydrolysed urine (5.2 ± 0.3 g/L) to 2.6–5.1 g/L, while the pH of the inoculation mixtures remained > 9 and soluble chemical oxygen demand (sCOD) at 5.6–6.7 g/L. Despite the high pH, current generation started within 24 h for all reactors, and robust bioanodes tolerant of continuous feeding with undiluted hydrolysed urine were enriched within 11 days of start-up. Current output and Coulombic efficiency decreased with increasing initial hydrolysed urine fraction. The anodes inoculated with the highest sCOD-to-TAN ratio (2.1) performed the best, which suggests that high organics levels can protect microbes from inhibition even at elevated TAN concentrations.

Full Text
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