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Simultaneous recovery of ammonium and total phosphorus from toilet tail water by modified palygorskite–bentonite clay
Author(s) -
Sun Shengguang,
Ji Guixia,
Lv Yicheng,
Liu Hongbo,
Hu Tao,
Chen Zhongbing,
Xu Suyun
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
water environment research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.356
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1554-7531
pISSN - 1061-4303
DOI - 10.1002/wer.1495
Subject(s) - bentonite , palygorskite , adsorption , chemistry , phosphorus , effluent , ammonium , environmental chemistry , nuclear chemistry , environmental engineering , chemical engineering , organic chemistry , environmental science , engineering
Suitable treatment of toilet sewage is a worldwide challenge. The anaerobic baffled reactor (ABR)–microbial fuel cell (MFC)–microbial electrolysis cell (MEC) (AMM) coupling treatment system has been constructed achieving effective removal of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus from toilet sewage and resource recovery; however, ammonium (NH 4 + ‐N) and total phosphorus (TP) accumulation in tail water is a found problem of the system. In this study, acid‐modified and alkali‐heat modified palygorskite–bentonite (Pal‐Ben) were used to recover NH 4 + ‐N and TP from the AMM toilet tail water simultaneously. The higher adsorption capacity of the modified clay is attributed to the changes of surface structure of the material. The modified clay Pal‐Ben (mass ratio 1:3) activated with alkali performed the highest NH 4 + ‐N and TP recovery rates of 83.6% and 85.5%, respectively. The adsorption of NH 4 + ‐N was more in line with the pseudo‐second‐order kinetic model and confirmed to be a chemical adsorption process, while the adsorption of TP was more in line with the pseudo‐first‐order kinetics and a physical adsorption process; the adsorption capacity of NH 4 + ‐N accelerated with decrease of TP removal when pH increased. This study developed a low cost and high capacity of alkaline thermally modified clay removing/recovering NH 4 + ‐N and TP from toilet tail water simultaneously. Practitioner points A cheap composite clay was developed to recover nitrogen and phosphorus from toilet tail water simultaneously. The low costs and high capacity of alkaline thermally modified clay make it stand out in NH 4 + ‐N and TP removal of toilet tail water. The process mechanism of simultaneous nitrogen and phosphorus recovery was clarified with characterization and kinetic model fitting. The used clay loaded with nutrients could be applied as a slow‐release compound fertilizer for soil improvement.

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