Phosphorus Recovery from Whole Digestate through Electrochemical Leaching and Precipitation

  • Zixuan Wang
  • , Daran Anand
  • , Zhen He

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Scopus citations

Abstract

Phosphorus (P) recovery from biosolids can play an important role in a circular economy. Herein, an electrochemical phosphorus recovery cell (EPRC) was proposed and examined to recover P from municipal whole digestate via simultaneous leaching and precipitation. The anode of the EPRC released P as aqueous PO43--P through acidification, achieving the highest leaching efficiency of 93.3% under a current density of 30 A m-2. When the leached P solution was treated in the cathode, native metals including Ca and Fe facilitated electrochemically mediated PO43--P precipitation (EMP) and precipitated ∼99% of the leached P in the cathode chamber. Around 54.3-78.7% of total P existed in two harvestable forms: suspended solids in the cathode effluent and immobilized P in the cathode chamber. The solid products contained 28.42-33.51% of P2O5, comparable to the high-grade phosphate rock. Higher current densities reduced cathode scaling and resulted in a lower content of heavy metals in the solid products. An acidic solution was reused three times and effectively maintained cathode performance during a 42-cycle operation, achieving a consistent P recovery efficiency of nearly 80%. Those results have demonstrated the feasibility of the EPRC for recovering P from P-rich solid wastes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)10107-10116
Number of pages10
JournalEnvironmental Science and Technology
Volume57
Issue number27
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 11 2023

Keywords

  • digestate
  • electrochemical system
  • phosphorus leaching
  • phosphorus recovery
  • sustainability

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