4.7 Article

Valorization of cow manure via hydrothermal carbonization for phosphorus recovery and adsorbents for water treatment

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 308, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.114561

Keywords

Phosphorus recovery; Cow manure; Hydrochar; Pyrolysis; Water remediation

Funding

  1. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future at Boston University
  2. US-Italy Fulbright Commission
  3. University of Trento
  4. Eppley Foundation for sup-porting the work of Andrew Hubble
  5. China Scholarship Council
  6. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [1021398]

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The increased quantities of livestock manure and its agronomic use have raised concerns about the impact on soil and groundwater quality. This study investigated the hydrothermal carbonization of cow manure to recover phosphorus and evaluated the resulting hydrochars as adsorbent materials for water remediation.
The increased quantities of manure being generated by livestock and their extensive agronomic use have raised concerns around run-off impacting soil and groundwater quality. Manure contains valuable nutrients (especially phosphorus) that are critical to agriculture, but when directly land-applied the run-off of such nutrients contributes to eutrophication of waterways. This study investigates the hydrothermal carbonization of cow manure at two industrially feasible process extremes: 190 ?, 1 h and 230 ?, 3 h, to concentrate and then recover phosphorus from the solid hydrochar via acid leaching and precipitation. Up to 98 wt% of phosphorus initially present in the hydrochar (88% in the raw manure) can be recovered, with the dominant crystalline species being hydroxyapatite. Acid leached hydrochars were subsequently pyrolyzed at 600 ? for 30 min, and then evaluated as adsorbent materials for water remediation by using methylene blue as a model adsorbate. Although pyrolyzed hydrochars have surface areas an order of magnitude higher (160-236 m(2)/g) than the non-pyrolyzed acid leached hydrochars (11-23 m(2)/g), their adsorption capacity is three times lower. Furthermore, while the higher carbonization temperature leads to greater recovery of phosphorus, it likewise leads to higher heavy metal concentrations in the precipitate (ranging from 0.1 to 100 mgmetal/gppt). As such, lower temperature carbonization followed by acid-extraction - without further solid processing - is a potential pathway to recover phosphorus and adsorbent materials.

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