Pulsed electric field drives chemical-free membrane stripping for high ammonia recovery from urine.

Water Res

Key Laboratory for City Cluster Environmental Safety and Green Development of the Ministry of Education, School of Ecology, Environment and Resources, Guangdong University of Technology, Guangzhou 510006, China. Electronic address:

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recovering ammonia from waste streams like urine is crucial to decrease reliance on natural gas for ammonia production and to minimize nitrogen pollution in water.
  • The study introduces a novel electrochemical membrane stripping system that utilizes an oxygen evolution reaction to produce acid in-situ, enhancing ammonia recovery efficiency from synthetic urine.
  • The new system dramatically improved ammonia recovery rates from around 80% to over 90%, with a cost-effective process that holds potential for sustainable nitrogen management in waste treatment.

Article Abstract

Recovering ammonia from waste streams (e.g., urine) is highly desirable to reduce natural gas-based NH production and nitrogen discharge into the water environment. Electrochemical membrane stripping is an attractive alternative because it can drive NH transformation to NH via cathodic OH production; however, the conventional configurations suffer from relatively low ammonia recovery (<80 %) and significant acid/material usage for ammonia adsorption. To this end, we develop a novel stack system that simply uses an oxygen evolution reaction to in-situ produce acid from water, enabling chemical-free ammonia recovery from synthetic urine. In batch mode, the percentage removal and recovery increased respectively from 74.5 % to 97.9 % and 81.8 % to 92.7 % when the electrode pairs increased from 2 to 4 in the stack system. To address the gas-sparging issue that deteriorated ammonia recovery in continuous operation, pulsed electric field (PEF) mode was applied, resulting in ∼100 % recovery under optimized conditions. At an ammonia removal rate of 35.1 g-N m h and electrical energy consumption of 28.9 kWh kg-N, our chemical-free system in PEF mode has achieved significantly higher ammonia recovery (>90 %) from synthetic urine. The total cost to recover 1 kg of NH-N from real human urine was $15.9 in the proposed system. Results of this study demonstrate that this novel approach holds great promise for high ammonia recovery from waste streams, opening a new pathway toward sustainable nitrogen management.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2024.121129DOI Listing

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