4.8 Article

Calcium removal from stabilized human urine by air and CO2 bubbling

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 202, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2021.117467

Keywords

Calcium carbonate; Calcium hydroxide; Membranes; Reverse osmosis; Scaling; Sequestration

Funding

  1. Royal Society
  2. African Academy of Sciences, through the FLAIR Fellowship
  3. National Research Foundation
  4. Water Research Commission

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Stabilizing urine with calcium hydroxide can prevent enzymatic urea hydrolysis, allowing for maximum nitrogen recovery. Adding air and carbon dioxide to stabilized urine can effectively remove calcium ions as calcium carbonate, with air bubbling being the more cost-efficient option. The study found that calcium removal efficiency can reach up to 98% at certain air flow rates, and that even if the pH decreases, urine remains stabilized with no enzymatic urea hydrolysis.
Stabilization of urine with calcium hydroxide prevents enzymatic urea hydrolysis, thus allowing for maximum nitrogen recovery. The process also produces a calcium phosphate bi-product which has value as a fertilizer. However, the treated solution is saturated with calcium that could ultimately result in calcium carbonate scaling of reverse osmosis membranes during urine concentration. This would result in a decrease in maximum water removal and an increase in operational costs. This study therefore investigated if bubbling air and carbon dioxide through stabilized urine could remove calcium ions as calcium carbonate. The process was modelled to better understand the mechanisms controlling the reactions in the process. The model was then used to determine the most cost and time efficient operating conditions. Calcium removal of between 85-98% was achieved at air flow rates of 1.5 to 9 L min-1. Increasing the CO2 concentration from 0.04% (air) to 1% decreased the reaction time from 20.5 h to 2.5 h but the cost of CO2 outweighed the shorter operating time. Air bubbling was the more cost-efficient option. It was estimated that 95% of the calcium could be removed in 7.6 h at an air flow rate of 4 L min-1 L-1 of urine and at a cost of $0.65 m- 3. It was also determined that even if the pH decreased to below 11, the urine remained stabilized and no enzymatic urea hydrolysis occurred.

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