Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2020
Alkaline dehydration of source -separated fresh human urine: Preliminary insights into using different dehydration temperature and media
Simha, Prithvi; Lalander, Cecilia; Nordin, Annika; Vinneras, BjornAbstract
For sanitation systems aiming at recycling nutrients, separately collecting urine at source is desirable as urine contains most of the nutrients in wastewater. However, reducing the volume of the collected urine and recovering majority of its nutrients is necessary, as this improves the transportability and the end-application of urine-based fertilisers. In this study, we present an innovative method, alkaline dehydration, for treating fresh human urine into a nutrient-rich dry solid. Our aim was to investigate whether fresh urine (pH<7) added to five different alkaline media (pH>11) could be dehydrated at elevated temperatures (50 and 60 °C) with minimal loss of urea, urine's principal nitrogen compound. We found that it was possible to concentrate urine 48 times, yielding dry end-products with high fertiliser value: approximately, 10% N, 1% P, and 4% K. We monitored the physico-chemical properties and the composition of various dehydration media to provide useful insights into their suitability for dehydrating urine. We demonstrated that it is possible to recover >90% nitrogen when treating fresh urine by alkaline dehydration by inhibiting the enzymatic hydrolysis of urea at elevated pH and minimisingthe chemical hydrolysis of urea with high urine dehydration rates.Keywords
Bioeconomy; Fertiliser; Nutrient recovery; Resource-oriented sanitation; Urine dehydration; Wastewater treatmentPublished in
Science of the Total Environment2020, volume: 733, article number: 139313
Publisher: ELSEVIER
Authors' information
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Energy and Technology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Energy and Technology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Energy and Technology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Energy and Technology
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG6 Clean water
UKÄ Subject classification
Water Treatment
Publication Identifiers
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.139313
URI (permanent link to this page)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/106786