Electrochemical ammonia recovery and co-production of chemicals from manure wastewater

被引:0
|
作者
Rui Wang
Kai Yang
Cindy Wong
Horacio Aguirre-Villegas
Rebecca Larson
Fikile Brushett
Mohan Qin
Song Jin
机构
[1] University of Wisconsin–Madison,Department of Chemistry
[2] University of Wisconsin–Madison,Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
[3] Massachusetts Institute of Technology,Department of Chemical Engineering
[4] University of Wisconsin–Madison,Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies
来源
Nature Sustainability | 2024年 / 7卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Livestock manure wastewater, containing high level of ammonia, is a major source of water contamination, posing serious threats to aquatic ecosystems. Because ammonia is an important nitrogen fertilizer, efficiently recovering ammonia from manure wastewater would have multiple sustainability gains from both the pollution control and the resource recovery perspectives. Here we develop an electrochemical strategy to achieve this goal by using an ion-selective potassium nickel hexacyanoferrate (KNiHCF) electrode as a mediator. The KNiHCF electrode spontaneously oxidizes organic matter and uptakes ammonium ions (NH4+) and potassium ions (K+) in manure wastewater with a nutrient selectivity of ∼100%. Subsequently, nitrogen- and potassium-rich fertilizers are produced alongside the electrosynthesis of H2 (green fuel) or H2O2 (disinfectant) while regenerating the KNiHCF electrode. The preliminary techno-economic analysis indicates that the proposed strategy has notable economic potential and environmental benefits. This work provides a powerful strategy for efficient nutrient (NH4+ and K+) recovery and decentralized fertilizer and chemical production from manure wastewater, paving the way to sustainable agriculture.
引用
收藏
页码:179 / 190
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Microbial Electrochemical Nutrient Recovery from Wastewater
    Chen, Xi
    Hou, Dianxun
    Ren, Zhiyong
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2019, 257
  • [42] Electrochemical Recovery of Metals from Cadmium Wastewater
    Wang, Yanfei
    Xu, Wenjie
    Zhuo, Qiongfang
    Xu, Zhencheng
    Guo, Qingwei
    CHEMISTRY LETTERS, 2014, 43 (08) : 1312 - 1314
  • [43] Metal recovery from wastewater with an electrochemical method
    Chin, Der-Tau
    Chemical Engineering Education, 2002, 36 (02): : 144 - 149
  • [44] Is co-production working well in recovery colleges? Emergent themes from a systematic narrative review
    Bester, Karen Louise
    McGlade, Anne
    Darragh, Eithne
    JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH TRAINING EDUCATION AND PRACTICE, 2022, 17 (01) : 48 - 60
  • [45] Flexible Electrochemical Stripping for Wastewater Ammonia Recovery with On-Demand Product Tunability
    Kogler, Anna
    Gong, Meili
    Williams, Kindle S.
    Tarpeh, William A.
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY LETTERS, 2024, 11 (08): : 886 - 894
  • [46] From mass production towards customer integration and co-production
    Reichwald, R
    Piller, FT
    WIRTSCHAFTSINFORMATIK, 2003, 45 (05): : 515 - 519
  • [47] Ammonia recovery from anaerobically digested cattle manure by steam stripping
    Zeng, L.
    Mangan, C.
    Li, X.
    WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2006, 54 (08) : 137 - 145
  • [48] Recovery of useful chemicals from palm oil mill wastewater
    Ratanaporn, Yuangsawad
    Duangkamol, Na-Ranong
    Teruoki, Tago
    Takao, Masuda
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCES IN ENERGY SYSTEMS AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING (ASEE17), 2017, 22
  • [49] Technical and financial feasibility of a chemicals recovery and energy and water production from a dairy wastewater treatment plant
    Basem, Ali
    Jasim, Dheyaa J.
    Ghodratallah, Pooya
    AbdulAmeer, S.
    Mahmood, Ahmed Mohammed
    Khudhayer, Wisam J.
    Dabis, Hasan Khalid
    Marefati, Mohammad
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2024, 14 (01):
  • [50] Reaction Rate of Hydrothermal Ammonia Production from Chicken Manure
    Matsumura, Yukihiko
    Suganuma, Yuito
    Ichikawa, Takayuki
    Kim, Wookyung
    Nakashimada, Yutaka
    Nishida, Keiya
    ACS OMEGA, 2021, 6 (36): : 23442 - 23446