AI Article Synopsis

  • Municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) significantly emit greenhouse gases like CH, NO, and CO; a new approach aims to minimize these emissions while recycling nutrients.
  • The proposed method involves operating the treatment process at low sludge retention times to boost bacterial yield and eliminate nitrification, thus increasing resource recovery (phosphorus, ammonia, methane) and reducing energy demand.
  • Key innovations include using a unique ion-exchange material for ammonia separation and recovery, expected to enhance methane production and reduce harmful NO emissions, warranting further empirical study.

Article Abstract

The operation of municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) invariably results in significant emission of greenhouse gases (i.e., CH, NO, and CO) into the atmosphere. We propose to consider a radical change in the way municipal WWTPs are operated, with the aim of minimizing GHG emissions while recycling most of the nutrient mass. The means to this end are to reduce the WWTP energy demand while maximizing the recovery of resources (phosphorus, ammonia, methane). The suggested concept involves operating the activated sludge process at a low sludge retention time (SRT < 2 d), i.e., under conditions that maximize the heterotrophic mass yield and eliminate nitrification. The ammonia concentration that remains in the water (considering N in the excess sludge and struvite production in the sludge-dewatering supernatant line) would be separated from the WWTP effluents using a unique ion-exchange material (ZnHCF), which would be regenerated using a low-volume 4 M NaCl solution. The ammonia would be then stripped at high pH and re-adsorbed by an acidic solution for reuse as fertilizer. The high bacterial yield and lack of nitrification in the aerobic step are expected to boost methane yield 3-4-fold, induce lower oxygen consumption, and most importantly, yield much lower NO release. An approximate energy mass balance shows the concept to merit further consideration, owing to the potential significant reduction in NO emissions and recovery of resources. Empirical work followed by LCA is required to corroborate the hypothesis presented herein.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.171835DOI Listing

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