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Projects / Programmes source: ARIS

Method for decontamination of sewage sludge and sludge products for their sustainable use as phosphorous fertilizers

Research activity

Code Science Field Subfield
4.03.00  Biotechnical sciences  Plant production   
2.02.00  Engineering sciences and technologies  Chemical engineering   

Code Science Field
4.01  Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences  Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 
2.04  Engineering and Technology  Chemical engineering  
Keywords
Sustainability, sewage sludge, sludge ash, struvite, phosphorus, soil fertilisation, toxic metals, organic pollutants, hydrodynamic cavitation, ethylenediamine tetraacetate, sludge composting, lysimeter beds, soil functioning, plant toxicity
Evaluation (rules)
source: COBISS
Researchers (10)
no. Code Name and surname Research area Role Period No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  23471  PhD Matevž Dular  Energy engineering  Researcher  2020 - 2023  462 
2.  39098  PhD Simon Gluhar  Plant production  Junior researcher  2020  39 
3.  54520  PhD Parham Kabirifar  Process engineering  Researcher  2022 - 2023  16 
4.  34338  PhD Anela Kaurin  Plant production  Researcher  2020 - 2023  49 
5.  08259  PhD Domen Leštan  Plant production  Head  2020 - 2023  408 
6.  13073  PhD Rok Mihelič  Plant production  Researcher  2020 - 2023  482 
7.  53692  PhD Juan Francisco Morales Arteaga  Plant production  Junior researcher  2020 - 2023  16 
8.  35069  PhD Martin Petkovšek  Process engineering  Researcher  2020 - 2023  133 
9.  14011  PhD Dominik Vodnik  Biology  Researcher  2020 - 2023  415 
10.  33926  PhD Mojca Zupanc  Process engineering  Researcher  2020 - 2023  78 
Organisations (2)
no. Code Research organisation City Registration number No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  0481  University of Ljubljana, Biotechnical Faculty  Ljubljana  1626914  66,844 
2.  0782  University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering  Ljubljana  1627031  29,252 
Abstract
Phosphorus is a depletable resource and essential macro-nutritional element in agriculture. Nowadays phosphorus is almost exclusively produced by the mining of phosphate rock. Europe imports phosphate rock mostly from Morocco where mines are mainly located in annexed Western Sahara. Regional political instability and strong new phosphorous markets in Africa and Asia could lead to relative scarcity of phosphorus. In 2014 phosphate rock was placed on the EU critical raw material list. EU also adopted the concept of circular economy addressing mounting resource-related challenges. Phosphorus is potentially recyclable and re-usable by direct application of sludge on agricultural land and as P mineral struvite extracted and recrystallized from ash after sludge incineration. Widespread contamination of sludge with toxic metals and further concentration of metals in sludge ash are the main, jet unsolved problem in environmentally sustainable phosphorus reclamation. Decontamination of sludge and sludge products (digestate, pyrolysate, ash, struvite), prior to their use as phosphorus fertilizers in agriculture, by extraction of toxic metals using strong chelator ethylenediamine tetraacetate (EDTA) has gained much attention due to high metal removal efficiency. However, EDTA is not biodegradable and persist in the environment. High cost of EDTA, generation of vast volumes of waste waters, and leaching of EDTA chelates with toxic metals from sludge and sludge products applied on agricultural land hampered the development of feasible decontamination method. In this project we are introducing novel EDTA-based method for sludge and sludge products decontamination. The method will be developed considering sustainability concepts to reduce the unintended environmental and economic footprint: EDTA will be recycled, no wastewater will be generated, and toxic emissions to the environment will be prevented. The apparent EDTA non-biodegradability will cease being an issue. The hydrodynamic cavitation process will be coupled to decontamination method. It will be optimised for efficient sludge disaggregation and enhanced removal of contaminants from sludge and sludge products. Next to toxic metals the linear alkyl benzene sulphonates (LAS) are the most ubiquitous and hazardous organic pollutants in sludge. The feasibility of novel decontamination method to remove LAS and LAS soluble lipophilic xenobiotics simultaneously with toxic metals will be investigated. Pyrene, a typical 4-ring polyromantic hydrocarbon (PAH) will serve as a model for lipophilic compounds. In addition, the application of bulking material and CaO2 as oxygen releasing compound to the slurry before dewatering of decontaminated sludge will be tested as means for enhanced sludge composting. The agronomical properties of decontaminated and composted sludge and ash-derived struvite as phosphorus fertilizers will be examined in experimental beds with maize (Zea mays). Maize growth and fitness will be assessed, and phosphorus uptake put in relation to uptake from commercial fertilizer. Beds will be designed as lysimeters; all leachates will be collected and analysed for potential toxic emissions. The functioning of soil fertilised with decontaminated sludge and struvite will be assessed using microbial and enzymes activity as bioindicators. Potential sludge and struvite phytotoxicity will be assessed by measuring plant stress proteins. The Life cycle assessment (LCA) will be used to analyse economic, social and environmental viability of novel decontamination method.
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