Porous carbons derived from hydrothermally treated biogas digestate.

Waste Manag

University of Hohenheim, Institute of Agricultural Engineering, Department of Conversion Technologies of Biobased Resources, Garbenstrasse 9, 70599 Stuttgart, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: March 2020

Porous carbons from digestate-derived hydrochar were produced, characterized and their performance to reclaim phosphate from water was evaluated as a preliminary approach to demonstrate their practical application. In a first step, the digestate was converted into hydrochars through hydrothermal carbonization by using two different pH conditions: 8.3 (native conditions) and 3.0 (addition of HSO). The resulting hydrochars did not present significant differences. Consecutively, the hydrochars were activated with KOH to produce activated carbons with enhanced textural properties. The resulting porous carbons presented marked differences: the AC native presented a lower ash content (20.3 wt%) and a higher surface area (S = 1106 m/g) when compared with the AC-HSO (ash content = 43.7 wt% S = 503 m/g). Phosphorus, as phosphate, is a resource present in significative amount in wastewater, causing serious problems of eutrophication. Therefore, the performance of the porous carbons samples to recover phosphate - P(PO) - from water was evaluated through exploitation assays that included kinetic studies. The lumped model presented a good fitting to the kinetic data and the obtained uptake capacities were the same for both carbons, 12 mg P(PO)/g carbon. Despite the poorer textural properties of AC-HSO, this carbon was richer in Ca, Al, Fe, K, and Mg cations which promoted the formation of mineral complexes with phosphate anions. The results obtained in this work are promising for the future development of P(PO) enriched carbons that can be used thereafter as biofertilizers in soil amendment applications.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2020.02.011DOI Listing

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