4.7 Article

Harnessing biofertilizer from human urine via chemogenic and biogenic routes: Synthesis, characterization and agronomic application

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY & INNOVATION
Volume 25, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eti.2021.102152

Keywords

Human urine; Resource recovery; Biomineralization; Struvite; Biofertilizer; Plant growth promotion

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This study successfully converted human urine into fertilizer through chemical and biological mineralization, and evaluated their fertilizer potential. The synthesized struvite products showed slow release fertilizer characteristics and improved plant growth and seed yield of cowpea. It was found that struvite has the potential for long-term phosphate supply. The chemogenic synthesis route yielded higher struvite compared to the biogenic synthesis, but the latter is preferred for its eco-friendliness.
This study aimed at recovering nutrients from human urine as valorized products through chemical and biological mineralization, and assessing their fertilizer potential. Chemosynthesis of struvite (MgNH4PO4 center dot 6H(2)O) was accomplished from fresh human urine through chemical mineralization using magnesia, whereas biogenic synthesis was achieved through microbial mineralization by employing a wastewater bacterium (Pseudomonas aeruginosa KUJM KY355382.1). Elemental analysis and other characterization results confirmed the synthesized products as struvite under both chemical and biological synthesis methods. The potential of the chemogenic and biogenic struvite products as slow release fertilizer was reflected in improved plant growth characteristics, including height, fresh weight, dry weight, pod length and seed yield, of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) compared to the control set. Specially, the seeds obtained per plant were 137.71 and 125.14% higher after application of chemogenic and biogenic struvite, respectively, compared to a no-fertilizer control. When assessing aging effect on struvite's chemical structure by comparing a 15-year old struvite crystal with the recently synthesized biomineral, the weathered struvite was found to lose NH4+ however, retain PO43- and Mg2+, implying its phosphate supplying potential over a long period. Both the chemogenic and biogenic synthesis routes successfully converted human urine to fertilizer ('waste into wealth'), but the struvite yield was higher in the case of chemogenic synthesis using magnesia (474 +/- 9.64 mg L-1) than biogenic synthesis employing Pseudomonas aeruginosa KUJM (345 +/- 6.08 mg L-1). Still, the biogenic synthesis is preferred over the chemogenic route because the process is more eco-friendly. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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