Ammonia-selective recovery from anaerobic digestate using electrochemical ammonia stripping combined with electrodialysis

[Display omitted] •ED-EAS hybrid process for ammonia-selective recovery from anaerobic digestate was investigated.•Various parameters for EAS were evaluated and optimized.•ED successively concentrated ammonia from anaerobic digestate.•ED-EAS recovered ammonia selectively, highly, quickly and energy-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical engineering journal (Lausanne, Switzerland : 1996) Switzerland : 1996), 2024-01, Vol.479, p.147949, Article 147949
Hauptverfasser: Aung, Shine Lin, Choi, Jihyeok, Cha, Hoyoung, Woo, Gaeun, Song, Kyung Guen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •ED-EAS hybrid process for ammonia-selective recovery from anaerobic digestate was investigated.•Various parameters for EAS were evaluated and optimized.•ED successively concentrated ammonia from anaerobic digestate.•ED-EAS recovered ammonia selectively, highly, quickly and energy-efficiently. An electrodialysis (ED)-electrochemical ammonia stripping (EAS) hybrid process is used for the quick and efficient recovery of ammonia from anaerobic digestate. A series of EAS experiments using synthetic ammonia solutions was conducted to determine the optimal operating conditions for the ED-EAS hybrid process with actual anaerobic digestate. These parameters included the feeding modes (anodic vs. cathodic), applied currents, anolyte composition, and capture chemicals, with a focus on their impact on ammonia recovery. As a result, cathodic feeding showed advantages over anodic feeding because of its benefit in converting NH4+ to NH3 through successful pH elevation in the cathode compartment. High current density provided sufficient OH− to increase the cathode compartment's pH, and using Na2HPO4, a salt of triprotic acid, as an anolyte resulted in a rapid pH increase due to pH buffering, resulting in a better ammonia recovery. Through three cycles of ED operation (8 h), the ED-EAS hybrid process experiment for actual anaerobic digestate concentrated ammonia to 3.775 g/L, three times higher than the initial concentration. Ammonia was recovered to 90.5 ± 0.4 % with 11.6 kWh/kg-NH3 energy consumption from the ED concentrate in 5 h using the EAS. This study demonstrated the possibility of ammonia-selective recovery from anaerobic digestate using an integrated ED-EAS system.
ISSN:1385-8947
1873-3212
DOI:10.1016/j.cej.2023.147949