Recovery of Calcium Phosphates from Composted Chicken Manure
-
- Sugiyama Shigeru
- Department of Advanced Materials, Institute of Technology and Science, Tokushima University Department of Resource Circulation Engineering, Center for Frontier Research of Engineering, Tokushima University
-
- Kitora Ryuta
- Department of Chemical Science and Technology, Tokushima University
-
- Kinoshita Haruka
- Department of Chemical Science and Technology, Tokushima University
-
- Nakagawa Keizo
- Department of Advanced Materials, Institute of Technology and Science, Tokushima University Department of Resource Circulation Engineering, Center for Frontier Research of Engineering, Tokushima University
-
- Katoh Masahiro
- Department of Advanced Materials, Institute of Technology and Science, Tokushima University
-
- Nakasaki Kiyohiko
- Department of International Development Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Search this article
Abstract
To recover phosphorus from composted chicken manure, a batch method with aqueous HNO3, HCl and H2SO4 was used to examine the elution behavior of the aqueous calcium and phosphate contained in the manure. Since the main components in manure are Ca2+ and K+ along with PO43− and those ions can be dissolved using an acidic eluate, it was expected that most of the aqueous Ca2+, K+ and PO43− could be obtained via the elution. Therefore, it seemed plausible that the removal of the aqueous K+ obtained by the elution of composted chicken manure would result in the formation of calcium phosphates. If calcium phosphates are formed, they can be used for phosphate rock, which also consists of various calcium phosphates. When using 0.1 mol/L HNO3, HCl or H2SO4, the elution behavior of the PO43− was not dependent on the acids. However, 0.1 mol/L H2SO4 was not sufficient for the elution of Ca2+, probably due to the precipitation of the calcium sulfate. The eluted amount of K+ using 0.1 mol/L HNO3 was lower than that using 0.1 mol/L of either HCl or H2SO4. Since the poor elution of K+ should enrich the concentrations of Ca2+ and PO43− in the acidic aqueous solution after the elution, it was suggested that aqueous HNO3 would be suitable as an eluate in the present system. After the elution of the composted chicken manure, when 0.1 mol/L HNO3 was used to adjust the solution pH of the acidic aqueous solution to greater than 6, Ca2+ and PO43− were precipitated, but K+ was not. The precipitate was calcium hydroxyapatite, one of the typical components of phosphate rock, which showed that composted chicken manure could be replaced phosphate rock as a new source of phosphorus.
Journal
-
- JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING OF JAPAN
-
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING OF JAPAN 49 (2), 224-228, 2016
The Society of Chemical Engineers, Japan
- Tweet
Details 詳細情報について
-
- CRID
- 1390282679545624448
-
- NII Article ID
- 130005126520
-
- NII Book ID
- AA00709658
-
- ISSN
- 18811299
- 00219592
-
- NDL BIB ID
- 027204136
-
- Text Lang
- en
-
- Data Source
-
- JaLC
- IRDB
- NDL
- Crossref
- CiNii Articles
-
- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed