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The effect of organic matter on the removal of phosphorus through precipitation as struvite and calcium phosphate in synthetic dairy wastewater

Authors
Aleta, PrinceParikh, Sanjai J.Silchuk, Amy P.Scow, Kate M.Park, MinseungKim, Sungpyo
Issue Date
May-2018
Publisher
TECHNO-PRESS
Keywords
phosphorus recovery; struvite; calcium phosphate
Citation
MEMBRANE AND WATER TREATMENT, v.9, no.3, pp.163 - 172
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
MEMBRANE AND WATER TREATMENT
Volume
9
Number
3
Start Page
163
End Page
172
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/76080
DOI
10.12989/mwt.2018.9.3.163
ISSN
2005-8624
Abstract
This study investigated the effect of organic matter on the precipitation of struvite and calcium phosphate for phosphorus recovery from synthetic dairy wastewater. Batch precipitation experiments were performed to precipitate phosphorus from solutions containing PO43- and NH4+ by the addition of Mg2+ and Ca2+, separately, at varying pH, Mg/P and Ca/P molar ratios, and organic matter concentrations. Soluble total organic solids exhibited more inhibition to precipitation due to potential interaction with other dissolved ionic species involved in phosphorus precipitation. Xylan with low total acidity only exhibited significant inhibition at very high concentrations in synthetic wastewater (at up to 100 g/L). No significant inhibition was observed for Mg2+ and Ca2+ precipitation at relatively lower concentrations (at up to 1.2 g/L). MINTEQ simulations show that dissolved organic matter (DOM) as humic substances (HS) can cause significant inhibition even at relatively low concentrations of 0.165 g/L fulvic acid. However, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis suggested that xylan altered the crystal structure of both precipitates and had caused the formation of smaller sized struvite crystals with slightly rougher surfaces This could be due to xylan molecules adhering on the surface of the crystal potentially blocking active sites and limit further crystal growth. Smaller particle sizes will have negative practical impact because of poorer settleability.
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