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Ammonia Separation Using Bipolar Membrane Electrodialysis in Anaerobic Digestion of Organic Waste

Nitrogen pollution in the environment creates challenging problems globally and locally and can be effectively controlled by a significant reduction in nitrogen release into the natural water system. In addition, nutrients in high-strength wastewater can be recovered as valuable resources such as different types of ammonium solutions for industrial and agricultural utilizations. Selective ammonia separation from high-strength wastewater can be achieved by bipolar membrane electrodialysis (BMED), a relatively new ion exchange technology. A series of 8 bench-scale BMED experiments with bipolar membranes and cation exchange membranes were performed under various voltage applications. Ammonia in the wastewater was rapidly separated and recovered as a high purity ammonium hydroxide solution. BMED operation for 30 minutes at 5.0 V per cell pair was found to be ideal for high purity ammonium hydroxide production and low electrical energy consumption. Additionally, effective organic fouling control and low energy consumption were achieved. The experiments showed a decrease in the feed pH making it ideal for applications in solid-state anaerobic digestion with leachate recirculation. The application of leachate recirculation in solid-state anaerobic digestion (SSAD) has proven effective for mobilizing nutrients and diluting toxic byproducts to enhance biogas production. The leachate after recirculation contains accumulated ammonia and an increased pH and requires water and chemicals for dilution and pH adjustment prior to recirculation. The data from the experiments were used to construct a numerical model for a hypothetical lab-scale and pilot-scale bipolar membrane electrodialysis and solid-state anaerobic digestion with leachate recirculation (BMED-SSAD) system. A final ammonia concentration of less than 2000 mg-N/L in the reactor was found to be achievable by lab-scale (6 mA/cm2) and pilot-scale (12 mA/cm2) BMED-SSAD and low electric energy consumption. The results suggest that BMED is an attractive solution for ammonia separation from high-strength wastewater. / Thesis / Master of Applied Science (MASc)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/26425
Date January 2021
CreatorsMohammadi, Mariam
ContributorsKim, Younggy, Civil Engineering
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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