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Electrochemical stripping to recover nitrogen from source-separated urine William A. Tarpeh, James M Barazesh, Tzahi Y. Cath, and Kara L. Nelson Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b05488 • Publication Date (Web): 05 Jan 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 5, 2018
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Electrochemical stripping to recover nitrogen from source-separated urine
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William A. Tarpeh†,‡, James M. Barazesh†1, Tzahi Y. Cath #,‡, and Kara L. Nelson*†,‡ †
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, United States ‡ Engineering Research Center for Re-inventing the Nation’s Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt), 410 O’Brien Hall, Berkeley, California 94720, United States #Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado 80401, United States
Submitted to: Environmental Science & Technology October 2017 Revised: December 2017
1
Present address: Carollo Engineers., Inc. 3150 Bristol St #500, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 *Corresponding author:
[email protected] 1
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ABSTRACT
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Recovering nitrogen from separately collected urine can potentially reduce costs and energy of
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wastewater nitrogen removal and fertilizer production. Through benchtop experiments, we
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demonstrate the recovery of nitrogen from urine as ammonium sulfate using electrochemical
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stripping, a combination of electrodialysis and membrane stripping. Nitrogen was selectively
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recovered with 93% efficiency in batch experiments with real urine and required 30.6 MJ kg N–1
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in continuous-flow experiments (slightly less than conventional ammonia stripping). The effects
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of solution chemistry on nitrogen flux, electrolytic reactions, and reactions with electro-
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generated oxidants were evaluated using synthetic urine solutions. Fates of urine-relevant trace
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organic contaminants, including electrochemical oxidation and reaction with electro-generated
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chlorine, were investigated with a suite of common pharmaceuticals. Trace organics (1000 users). Pharmaceuticals were quantified by high-performance
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liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC–MS/MS) in the multiple reaction
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monitoring (MRM) mode using an Agilent 1200 series HPLC system with a Hydro-RP column
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(150 × 3 mm, 4uM; Phenomenex, Aschaffenburg, Germany) coupled to a 6460 triple quadrupole
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tandem mass spectrometer, as described previously.31
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2.5 Statistical Analysis
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Batch nitrogen recovery efficiencies for each influent (including synthetic urine with phenol)
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were compared using a one-way ANOVA and paired t-tests. In continuous-flow experiments,
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nitrogen fluxes and energy demands were also compared using a one-way ANOVA and paired t-
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tests.
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3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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3.1 Nitrogen recovery from real urine in batch experiments
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Batch experiments with real urine demonstrated that nitrogen was efficiently and selectively
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recovered via electrochemical stripping. More than 90% (92.7 ± 4.12%) of total ammonia in real
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urine was recovered in the trap chamber after 24 h (Figure 2). The recovery efficiency observed
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for electrochemical stripping was similar to that reported for conventional air stripping
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performed on hydrolyzed urine with half the total ammonia concentration (92%, 1960 mg N L–
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detected in the ammonium sulfate trap solution, indicating selective ammonia recovery (Figure
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S1); anions present in urine (e.g., acetate, phosphate) were not detected in the cathode or trap
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chambers, showing negligible mixing between chambers. Using the same operating parameters
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(e.g., current, recirculation rate, reactor geometry) as in batch experiments, the optimal HRT for
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continuous electrochemical stripping appears to be between 12 and 24 hours. For comparison, a
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previous study using electrodialysis for ammonia migration required 6 hours HRT but also an
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additional treatment step to separate ammonia from other cations.19 For electrodialysis, increased
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hydraulic residence time led to higher removal efficiencies but lower fluxes for ammonia,
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particularly at high current densities (≥50 A m–2).19 For electrochemical stripping, changes to
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HRT by changing reactor geometry or flow rate could optimize ammonia recovery efficiency
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and flux.
). Competitor cations (e.g., Na+, K+) present in urine accumulated in the cathode but were not
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3.2 Continuous electrochemical stripping with real urine
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Continuous-flow experiments were used to further characterize electrochemical stripping in
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terms of transmembrane fluxes, recovery efficiencies, and energy demand. With an influent 11
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concentration of 7490 mg N L–1, average concentrations after 3-5 HRTs (3.66-6.10 hr) were
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2960 mg N L–1 (anode), 1950 mg N L–1 (cathode), and 2250 mg N L–1 (trap). Nitrogen flux
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across the cation exchange membrane (1710 g N m–2 d–1) was higher than the flux across the
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hydrophobic gas permeable membrane (1010 g N m–2 d–1, Figure S2, Equations 2-3), indicating
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that the latter is the rate-limiting step of the electrochemical stripping process and a high priority
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for future work to reduce energy demand or increase recovery efficiency. For example, an
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asymmetric cathode chamber could be used to create a larger membrane surface area for the gas
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permeable membrane than the cation exchange membrane. Other gas permeable membranes
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could also be tested to optimize ammonia flux to the trap chamber. Based on open circuit
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experiments (no current), only 9% of flux across the cation exchange membrane was attributed
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to diffusion; electro-migration accounted for the balance. This finding was similar to previous
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research on electrodialysis in urine, in which diffusion accounted for 4-11% of ammonia flux
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and the contribution of diffusion to flux was larger for longer HRTs.19 Flux across the cation
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exchange membrane measured in this study was significantly higher than reported electrodialysis
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values, likely due to the addition of the gas permeable membrane that increased cathodic
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volatilization of NH3. This change reduced back-diffusion of NH3 to the anode chamber, which
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has been documented to limit NH4+ transport from anode to cathode.21 Operation at a higher
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current density (100 A m–2 in this study, maximum 50 A m–2 in literature, Table S5) also
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contributed.
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Overall, 61% of influent nitrogen was removed from the anode (Equation 4). Nitrogen removal
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efficiencies (across cation exchange membrane, 60.6%, Equation 4) were higher than nitrogen
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recovery efficiencies (across gas permeable membrane, 49.6%, Equation 5, Figure S2). Based on
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26% of TAN remaining in the cathode at steady state, increasing cathodic HRT (currently 1.22
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hr) could increase recovery efficiencies for both the gas permeable membrane and the overall
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electrochemical stripping process. Longer HRTs have been demonstrated to reduce flux but
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increase removal efficiency.19 Lower influent ammonia concentrations are expected to decrease
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flux (Equation 2); the degree of this effect is expected to vary based on the relative contribution
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of diffusion, which depends on a concentration gradient and varies directly with HRT.
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Transmembrane nitrogen recovery efficiencies for electrochemical stripping were higher than
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electrodialysis and microbial fuel cells, but lower than electrodialysis with external ammonia
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stripping (Table S7). TAN concentration in the fertilizer product could be increased in
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continuous flow by pumping additional urine through the anode for the same batch of sulfuric
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acid.
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Continuous-flow electrochemical stripping with real urine required 30.6 MJ kg N–1, the lowest
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energy input reported for physicochemical electrochemical treatment of urine to date (Table S6).
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Applying current accounted for 96% of energy required; the remaining 4% was for pumping.
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The energy demand for electrochemical stripping was 5% less than conventional ammonia
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stripping but still 38% higher than centralized nitrification-denitrification, which benefits from
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economies of scale (Figure S3). Current efficiency (mol N (mol e–)–1, Equation S5) for
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ammonium in real urine was greater than that previously reported for electrodialysis (61%)19 and
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even surpassed 100%, indicating contributions from diffusion (Figure S4). The higher current
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efficiency is likely due to the addition of the gas permeable membrane that enhanced transport of
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gaseous NH3 to the trap chamber and reduced accumulation of aqueous NH3 in the cathode.
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Lower current efficiencies were observed in synthetic urine solutions due to differences in
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electrical conductivity and competing oxidation reactions (section 3.3).
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3.3 Electrochemical oxidation reactions
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At the potentials employed for electrochemical stripping, several competing electrochemical
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reactions could potentially take place at the anode:
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2&' ( → (' + 4& , + 4-
E0= 1.229 V
(6)
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2./ → ./' + 2-
E0= 1.358 V
(7)
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&0 ..((& + 2&' ( → 2.(' + 8& , + 8-
E0= -0.29 V
(8)
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2&0 + 2&' ( → 2(' + 7& , + 6-
E0= -0.58 V
(9)
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Cyclic voltammetry and measurements of anticipated products were used to elucidate the
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contributions of each potential oxidation reaction. Acetate is an organic compound abundant in
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urine that could be oxidized (complete mineralization shown in Equation 8); ammonia could be
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oxidized to several nitrogen species, including nitrite (Equation 9).
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As expected, voltammograms performed in aqueous electrolytes confirmed that water oxidation
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was the primary anodic reaction (Figure S5). To isolate the remaining reactions, cyclic
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voltammetry was performed in anhydrous dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), an aprotic solvent.
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Comparable voltammograms for a synthetic urine matrix containing LiCl, NaC2H3O2, and
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(NH4)2CO3) with a single-salt solution of LiCl revealed that chloride oxidation was the second
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most predominant reaction (Figure S6). Chloride oxidation leads to disproportionation of Cl2 to
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hypochlorous acid (Equation 10), which was detected in the anode chamber in both synthetic and
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real urine treated via electrochemical stripping.
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./' + &' ( → & , + ./ + &(./
(10)
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Acetate and ammonia oxidation were confirmed to be insignificant based on constant anodic
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acetate concentrations and 0.05).
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Over 24 hours, both TAN and anodic pH (Figure S7) decreased, affecting the kinetics of
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chlorination of ammonia and organics. The pH effects on speciation of HOCl/OCl–, NH3/NH4+,
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and phenol/phenolate were included in kinetic calculations (see Section S1.2). In synthetic urine,
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ammonia chlorination was always faster than acetate chlorination; in synthetic urine with phenol,
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ammonia chlorination was slower than phenol chlorination for at least half of the experimental
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period (Figure S10). Chlorination of phenol preserved ammonia for migration and led to a higher
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nitrogen recovery in synthetic urine with phenol compared to synthetic urine alone. Thus, adding
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phenol to synthetic urine made it a more accurate model solution for studying the
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electrochemical treatment of real urine.
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3.5 Fate of trace organic contaminants
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Trace organic contaminants have been detected at significant concentrations in urine, especially
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because 64% of pharmaceuticals are excreted in urine.28 Most organics in urine are hydrophilic
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(e.g., phenolic, deprotonated amine functional groups) because lipophilic compounds tend to
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partition into feces.36 We measured a suite of pharmaceuticals, including beta blockers,
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antibiotics, and antivirals, in urine from Berkeley, California, USA; Nairobi, Kenya; and Zurich,
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Switzerland. Compounds with notably high concentrations included sulfamethoxazole (up to 10
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mg L–1), abacavir (up to 1 mg L–1), atenolol (up to 200 µg L–1), and carbamazepine (up to 10 µg
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L–1; Figure 4a). Most concentrations were highest in Nairobi urine, with acetaminophen in
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Berkeley and carbamazepine in Zurich being notable exceptions.
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Four primary fates of pharmaceuticals were evaluated: reaction with electro-generated oxidants
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in the anode chamber, electro-migration to cathode and trap chambers, transformation in the
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cathode chamber, and transformation in the trap chamber. The latter two fates were neglected
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based on no observed transformation in control experiments, with the exceptions of cathodic
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transformation of emitricitabine, zidovudine, and acetaminophen (Figure S11). Based on a mass
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balance that neglected cathodic and trap transformation, the fate of each compound in real urine
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is presented in Figure 4b. Most importantly, pharmaceuticals were not detected in the ammonium
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sulfate product (trap chamber). Two compounds were noticeably transported through the cation
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exchange membrane: atenolol (4% in cathode, pKa 9.6) and metoprolol (2% in cathode, pKa 9.5).
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Compounds containing electron-rich moieties (i.e., deprotonated amines) were removed faster in
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the anode due to rapid reactions with electrophilic chlorine species (e.g., HOCl and
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chloramines).37 Key exceptions included zidovudine and acyclovir, which may have back-
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diffused from the cathode to the anode due to their hydrophilicity (log Kow 94% transformed in synthetic urine, Figure S12). For all compounds, observed first-order rate
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constants for anodic transformation were higher in synthetic urine than in real urine (Figure S13).
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This difference was further evidence of less chlorine quenching in synthetic urine due to the
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presence of additional organic compounds in real urine. Higher residual concentrations of free
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chlorine in the anode with synthetic urine could explain higher observed rate constants for trace
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organics and lower nitrogen recovery efficiencies. While nitrogen recovery remains the primary
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goal of electrochemical stripping, further investigations into the mechanisms contributing to
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anodic transformation of pharmaceuticals in urine could enhance understanding of effluent
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treatment required after electrochemical stripping.
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3.6 Implications for urine treatment
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The required energy input was calculated for each influent in continuous experiments. Real urine
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required 30.6 MJ kg N–1, which was 55% less than ammonium sulfate, less energy than synthetic
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urine, and 5% less than conventional ammonia stripping (Figure S2). The high conductivity of
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real urine lowers ohmic resistance for charge transport through the anode, explaining the higher
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energy efficiency compared to ammonium sulfate (Figure S14). Additionally, higher nitrogen
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recovery efficiency in real urine over synthetic urine was responsible for higher energy
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efficiency in real urine. More generally, real urine composition varies, and conductivity could be
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an indicator for nitrogen recovery efficiency by electrochemical stripping (Figure S14).
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In addition to nitrogen, potassium could also be recovered by electrochemical stripping.
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Potassium was effectively recovered in the cathode chamber (Figure S1); no measurable amount
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was detected in the anode nor in the trap after batch experiments. In most regions potassium is an
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inexpensive fertilizer (between 0.50 and 1 USD kg–1);38,39 however, recovering it could enhance
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the value of urine-derived fertilizers. Recovering potassium and ammonium separately, along
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with phosphorus recovery before electrochemical stripping, could allow for production of
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fertilizers with customized macronutrient ratios.
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Urine-derived products should be safe for use, especially in the case of fertilizers. Processes for
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nitrogen recovery benefit from selective concentration of ammonium relative to other urine
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constituents, including other cations, pharmaceuticals, and trace elements. Besides ammonium
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and sulfate, no other ions were observed at measurable concentrations in the ammonium
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concentrate product (detection limits and compounds in Table S10). Similarly, pharmaceuticals
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were not detected in the trap chamber (see section 3.5). Influent urine has already been
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documented to contain low levels of heavy metals because most are excreted in feces.40 Trace
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elements were not detected in the ammonium sulfate product above 30 µg L–, with two
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exceptions: iron and zinc were detected at 400 µg L– due to impurities in sulfuric acid. Similar to
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urine-derived fertilizers, biosolids produced from wastewater sludge are a byproduct of waste
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treatment applied to land as fertilizer. Measured trace element concentrations were all less than
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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency pollutant limits for land application of biosolids (Figure
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S15a).41
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The major effluent produced from electrochemical stripping is electrolyzed urine from the anode
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chamber. Disinfectant residuals were at most 1.6 mg Cl2 equivalents L–1 for combined chlorine
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(Figure 3b) and 0.89 mg Cl2 equivalents L–1 for free chlorine. If treated urine goes to a
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wastewater treatment plant, the disinfectant residual will be consumed quickly when mixed with
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sewage. If treated urine is discharged to the environment, free chlorine will likely be consumed
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by ammonia in surface waters; however, combined chlorine at 1-2 mg L–1 could negatively
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impact aquatic life.42 Disinfection byproducts (DBPs) were not measured in this study; future
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work could lead to further characterization of DBPs in fertilizer and effluent produced from urine
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by electrochemical stripping. Anode material strongly influences production of DBPs (e.g.,
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trihalomethanes, ClO3–, and ClO4–) during electrochemical oxidation of ammonia, and is likely
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to have similar effects during electrochemical stripping.33 Similar to free chlorine, DBPs in
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treated urine discharged to a wastewater treatment plant will undergo further transformation; in
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on-site electrochemical stripping systems that discharge directly to the environment, the fate of
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DBPs is an important consideration. While DBPs may be of concern, a potential benefit of the
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electrochemically produced chlorine is inactivation of pathogens in urine at the anode, which is
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particularly attractive in decentralized settings that lack wastewater treatment facilities to receive
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electrolyzed urine effluent. Trace element concentrations for all three chambers, influent urine,
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and effluent urine from electrochemical were less than pollutant limits for land application of
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biosolids (Figure S15a).
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If catholyte is not recirculated and reused, it could also be a process effluent. Catholyte
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concentrations of pharmaceuticals were less than 0.4 µg L–1, with the exception of atenolol (0.74
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µg L–1) and acetaminophen (1.24 µg L–1). Trace elements were not detected above 30 µg L–1 in
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catholyte, with the exception of iron (200 µg L–1) and zinc (400 µg L–1, Figure S15b-c). Further
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optimization (e.g., of HRT, operating potential, temperature) could be investigated for
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pharmaceuticals and element removal from effluent urine and catholyte.
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In conclusion, electrochemical stripping was demonstrated at lab-scale to be an efficient process
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for selectively recovering nitrogen from urine. Ammonium sulfate fertilizer containing
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acceptably low levels of pharmaceuticals and trace elements was produced, and the role of
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organics such as phenols in scavenging electro-generated chlorine was elucidated. Moving
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toward implementation will require further characterization of the formation and fate of
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disinfection byproducts, pathogen inactivation, and process evaluation at the pilot-scale. With
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additional optimization, electrochemical stripping from urine could be implemented as an
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alternative to conventional nitrogen removal from wastewater that has the potential to reduce
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energy demand, greenhouse gas emissions, and nitrogen loads to receiving waters.
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ASSOCIATED CONTENT
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The Supporting Information (SI) contains equations for flux, energy demand, and efficiencies;
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tables describing influent streams, membranes, and trace organic compounds; and figures
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showing cyclic voltammetry, performance comparison of synthetic and urine solutions, and fate
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of trace organics and elements.
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AUTHOR INFORMATION
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Corresponding author (K.L.N.):
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Phone: 510-643-5023; e-mail:
[email protected] 22
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Notes
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The authors declare no competing financial interests.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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W.A.T., K.L.N., and T.Y.C. acknowledge funding provided by the National Science Foundation
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(NSF) through the Reinventing the Nation’s Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt) Engineering
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Research Center (http://renuwit.org; NSF Grant No. CBET-0853512). W.A.T. was also
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supported by an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (NSF Grant No. DGE 1106400), a Ford
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Foundation Fellowship, and a Harvey Fellowship. Preliminary work began with a Big Ideas at
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Berkeley Grant (2014). J.M.B. was supported by the U.S. National Institute for Environmental
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Health Sciences (NIEHS) Superfund Research Program (Grant P42 ES004705) and the
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Superfund Research Center at University of California, Berkeley.
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(17) Zöllig, H.; Fritzsche, C.; Morgenroth, E.; Udert, K. M. Direct electrochemical oxidation of ammonia on graphite as a treatment option for stored source-separated urine. Water Res. 2015, 69, 284–294. (18) Pronk, W.; Biebow, M.; Boller, M. Treatment of source-separated urine by a combination of bipolar electrodialysis and a gas transfer membrane. Water Sci. Technol. J. Int. Assoc. Water Pollut. Res. 2006, 53 (3), 139–146. (19) Luther, A. K.; Desloover, J.; Fennell, D. E.; Rabaey, K. Electrochemically driven extraction and recovery of ammonia from human urine. Water Res. 2015, 87, 367–377. (20) Desloover, J.; Woldeyohannis, A. A.; Verstraete, W.; Boon, N.; Rabaey, K. Electrochemical resource recovery from digestate to prevent ammonia toxicity during anaerobic digestion. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46 (21), 12209–12216. (21) Dykstra, J. E.; Biesheuvel, P. M.; Bruning, H.; Ter Heijne, A. Theory of ion transport with fast acid-base equilibrations in bioelectrochemical systems. Phys. Rev. E 2014, 90 (1), 13302. (22) Rodríguez Arredondo, M.; Kuntke, P.; ter Heijne, A.; Hamelers, H. V. M.; Buisman, C. J. N. Load ratio determines the ammonia recovery and energy input of an electrochemical system. Water Res. 2017, 111, 330–337. (23) Kuntke, P.; Zamora, P.; Saakes, M.; Buisman, C. J. N.; Hamelers, H. V. M. Gaspermeable hydrophobic tubular membranes for ammonia recovery in bio-electrochemical systems. Env. Sci Water Res Technol 2016, 2 (2), 261–265. (24) Olivares-Ramírez, J. M.; Campos-Cornelio, M. L.; Uribe Godínez, J.; Borja-Arco, E.; Castellanos, R. H. Studies on the hydrogen evolution reaction on different stainless steels. Int. J. Hydrog. Energy 2007, 32 (15), 3170–3173. (25) Udert, K.; Larsen, T.; Gujer, W. Fate of major compounds in source-separated urine. Water Sci. Technol. 2006, 54 (11–12), 413–420. (26) Udert, K. M.; Larsen, T. A.; Biebow, M.; Gujer, W. Urea hydrolysis and precipitation dynamics in a urine-collecting system. Water Res. 2003, 37 (11), 2571–2582. (27) Greenberg, A. E. Standard Methods: For the Examination of Water and Wastewater, 18th Edition, 18 r.e. edition.; Amer Public Health Assn: Washington, DC, 1992. (28) Lienert, J.; Bürki, T.; Escher, B. I. Reducing micropollutants with source control: substance flow analysis of 212 pharmaceuticals in faeces and urine. Water Sci. Technol. 2007, 56 (5), 87–96. (29) Zhang, R.; Sun, P.; Boyer, T. H.; Zhao, L.; Huang, C.-H. Degradation of Pharmaceuticals and Metabolite in Synthetic Human Urine by UV, UV/H2O2, and UV/PDS. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2015, 49 (5), 3056–3066. (30) Luo, Y.; Guo, W.; Ngo, H. H.; Nghiem, L. D.; Hai, F. I.; Zhang, J.; Liang, S.; Wang, X. C. A review on the occurrence of micropollutants in the aquatic environment and their fate and removal during wastewater treatment. Sci. Total Environ. 2014, 473–474, 619–641. (31) Jasper, J. T.; Jones, Z. L.; Sharp, J. O.; Sedlak, D. L. Biotransformation of trace organic contaminants in open-water unit process treatment wetlands. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2014, 48 (9), 5136–5144. (32) Kapałka, A.; Fierro, S.; Frontistis, Z.; Katsaounis, A.; Neodo, S.; Frey, O.; de Rooij, N.; Udert, K. M.; Comninellis, C. Electrochemical oxidation of ammonia (NH4+/NH3) on thermally and electrochemically prepared IrO2 electrodes. Electrochimica Acta 2011, 56 (3), 1361–1365.
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FIGURES
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Figure 1. Schematic of the electrochemical stripping setup. For batch experiments, each
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solution was recirculated in separate 1-L bottles. For continuous experiments the anode was fed
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continuously and the cathode and trap were recirculated only. 6
Mass N (g)
5 Anode
4
Cathode
3
Trap
2 1 0 0
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5
10
15
20
25
Time (hr)
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Figure 2. Mass of total ammonia nitrogen in each chamber over time in batch experiment.
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Dotted horizontal line is initial mass of ammonia nitrogen in anode. Error bars represent ± one
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standard deviation. Bars not shown are smaller than symbol, except for 21 hours (n=1).
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Figure 3. Results for varied influents from 24 hr batch experiments: (a) Nitrogen recovery
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efficiency measured. Error bars indicate ± one standard deviation. AS= ammonium sulfate,
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phenol = synthetic urine with phenol addition. (b) Combined chlorine measured in synthetic
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urine, synthetic urine with phenol addition (10 mM), and real urine.
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Figure 4. (a) Concentrations of 11 pharmaceuticals in urine from Berkeley, Nairobi, and Zurich.
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(b) Fate of pharmaceuticals in batch experiments with real urine. Error bars represent ± one
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standard deviation. See Table S4 for abbreviations and compound names.
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