Phosphorus recovery from human waste will help assure global food security, reduce environmental impact, and ensure effective stewardship of this limited and valuable resource. This can be accomplished by the precipitation of struvite (MgNHPO·6HO) in a two-zone reactor, continuously fed with nutrient-rich hydrolysed urine and a magnesium solution. The solid struvite crystals are periodically "harvested", removing accumulated crystal mass - and therefore recovered nutrients - from the process, and the operating campaign can, in principle, be continuously operated in a batch-continuous operating mode.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNutrient recovery from wastewater is an effective strategy to prevent eutrophication and provide value for the treatment process. Human urine is a small but highly nutrient-rich stream in the total flux of domestic wastewater from which struvite (MgNHPOHO) could be recovered and used as a fertiliser. Consequently, synthetic urine was used in most struvite precipitation studies, due to biohazard issues in real human urine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSolution thermodynamics and kinetic modelling applied to struvite crystallisation-precipitation were reviewed from diverse references to determine proximity between predicted and cited experimental measurements. These simulations show the expected variability range of struvite saturation calculation when only limited solution compositional information is given, showing acceptable agreement between predicted and experimental struvite mass. This work also compares results from struvite crystallisation kinetic studies on liquid phase species depletion, crystallisation induction time, primary nucleation, secondary nucleation, crystal growth, and crystal aggregation.
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