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Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
Phosphorus (P) is a non-renewable resource, irreplaceable for life and food production, and currently considered
a Critical Raw Material to the European Union (EU). Due to concerns about the rate of consumption and limited
reserves in countries with sensitive geopolitical contexts, it is urgent to recover P from urban and industrial
flows. Indeed, the municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) are considered relevant sources with several
hot spots, especially sewage sludge with estimated recovery efficiencies of >80%. The most promising recovery
strategies are based on thermal treatments (e.g., incineration of sludge) following by wet-chemical or thermochemical
leaching, precipitation, and adsorption. The direct application of sludge on soil is no longer a primary
route for P reintegration in the value-chain for countries as Switzerland, Germany, and The Netherlands. In
fact, Switzerland and Austria paved the way for implementing P recovery legislation, focusing on recovery from
raw sewage sludge or ashes. Indeed, industrial technologies with sludge ash as input show high recovery efficiencies
(Ashdec® and Leachphos® with 98 and 79%) and lower environmental impacts, whereas Pearl®
technology has about 12% recovery efficiency with wastewater as input. After all, struvite emerges as the most
recovered product with recent access to the internal market of EU fertilisers and similar growth performance
compared to triple-super-phosphate. However, several studies leave open the possibility of introducing loaded
adsorbents with P as soil amendments as a new alternative to conventional desorption. Briefly, P recovery should
be a compromise between efficiency, environmental impacts, and economic revenues from the final products
Descrição
Palavras-chave
phosphorus nutrients wastewater recovery strategies P-fertilizers
Contexto Educativo
Citação
Santos, A.F., Almeida, P.V., Alvarenga, P., Gando-Ferreira, L.M., Quina, M.J. (2021). From wastewater to fertilizer products: Alternative paths to mitigate phosphorus demand in European countries." Chemosphere 284: 131258
Editora
Elsevier
