A way to extract phosphorus from Waste water
Phosphorus is a precious element, with all life depending on it. It is an essential nutrient for plant growth and an important constituent of fertilizer used in agriculture.Phosphorus is often removed during waste water treatment because it can lead to algal blooms in waterways. It is traditionally removed from waste water streams using chemical or biological processes before the water is discharged to the environment.
Waste water streams typically contain low concentrations of phosphorus, making direct recovery of phosphorus both technically and economically challenging. However, a team from CSIRO has developed a technique that can recover phosphorus from these low concentrations to provide a valuable resource.The conventional biological treatment process known as enhanced biological phosphorus removal removes phosphorus from waste water by selectively enriching a group of bacteria known as polyphosphate accumulating organisms.
CSIRO’s novel approach, termed enhanced biological phosphorus removal and recovery, exploits this unique characteristic of the organisms to ‘carry’ the phosphorus from the diluted waste water stream over to a concentrated recovery stream.
The phosphorus concentration in the recovery stream was approximately four times that of the concentration in the original waste water.The result was a phosphorus concentration in the recovery stream that was approximately four times that of the phosphorus concentration in the original waste water.The novel approach has applications for waste water treatment utilities and fertilizer producers alike.Further research is underway to increase the phosphorus concentration in the recovery stream.This research is being delivered through the Urban Water Technologies Stream of CSIRO’s Water for a Healthy Country Flagship.
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