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Innovative Approach to Sustainable Fertilizer Production: Leveraging Electrically Assisted Conversion of Sewage Sludge for Nutrient Recovery

Author(s)
Botte, Gerardine G; Donneys-Victoria, Dayana; Alvarez-Pugliese, Christian E; Adjei, Jedidian; Sahin, Selin; Wilson, Nathan W; Millerick, Kayleigh; Hardberger, Amy; Furst, Ariel L; Hu, Nicole; Medford, Andrew J; ... Show more Show less
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Abstract
Efforts addressing sludge management, food security, and resource recovery have led to novel approaches in these areas. Electrically assisted conversion of sludge stands out as a promising technology for sewage sludge valorization, producing nitrogen and phosphorus-based fertilizers. The adoption of this technology, which could lead to a fertilizer circular economy, holds the potential to catalyze a transformative change in wastewater treatment facilities toward process intensification, innovation, and sustainability. This paper provides insights into the economic aspects of the technology, policy considerations, and challenges involved in realizing the potential of electrified processes for sludge valorization. To demonstrate the impact of the technology, a case study for its implementation in the United States assuming the municipal wastewater treatment plants market is discussed. It was found that electrically assisted sludge conversion could enable the recovery of nitrogen and phosphorus from waste, representing up to 9% of the nitrogen and 32% of the phosphorus consumption of the U.S. for fertilizer use. This technology also enables full electrification and modularization of the process, thereby presenting significant economic and environmental opportunities.
Date issued
2024-12-17
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/158291
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
Journal
ACS Omega
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Citation
Gerardine G. Botte, Dayana Donneys-Victoria, Christian E. Alvarez-Pugliese, Jedidian Adjei, Selin Sahin, Nathan W. Wilson, Kayleigh Millerick, Amy Hardberger, Ariel L. Furst, Nicole Hu, and Andrew J. Medford ACS Omega 2024 9 (50), 49692-49706.
Version: Final published version

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