4.5 Article

Precipitation to remove calcium ions from stabilized human urine as a pre-treatment for reverse osmosis

Journal

WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 12, Pages 3755-3768

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/wst.2021.479

Keywords

calcium carbonate; calcium hydroxide; fertilizer; membranes; scaling

Funding

  1. Royal Society
  2. African Academy of Sciences, through the FLAIR Fellowship

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The research examined the addition of carbonate salts to precipitate CaCO3 before RO concentration, finding that dosing of NaHCO3 or Na2CO3 effectively reduced calcium concentration while maintaining pH. Conductivity measurement was found to be an effective method for determining the required salt dose, with NH4HCO3 identified as a cost-effective alternative to NaHCO3.
Concentration of Ca(OH)(2) stabilized urine by reverse osmosis (RO) has the potential to cause CaCO3 scaling on the membranes. The aim of this research was to determine whether the addition of carbonate salts could be used to precipitate CaCO3 prior to RO concentration and how to accurately dose the salts. Dosing of NaHCO3 or Na2CO3 reduced the calcium concentration to,0.18 mmol L-1, whilst maintaining a pH. 11. This is the pH threshold for enzymatic urea hydrolysis in urine, but above the operating pH range of most membranes. However, the pH could be decreased by adding an acid. Measuring conductivity as a proxy for the calcium concentration was found to be an effective method to determine the dose of salt required. Simulations with other carbonate producing salts (KHCO3, Mg-CO3, and NH4HCO3) were also shown to be effective. However, NH4HCO3 ($0.53 m(-3) urine) was the only other salt comparable in cost to NaHCO3 ($0.49 m(-3) urine) and resulted in a final pH within the normal operating range of membranes. The addition of NH4HCO3 would add extra N to the urine rather than sodium ions when dosing NaHCO3. The choice of salt will ultimately depend on what liquid fertilizer composition is desired.

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