17β-Estradiol (E2) Removal in Anode-Electrodialysis (Anode-Ed) During Nutrient Recovery from Pig Manure Digestate

32 Pages Posted: 16 Jun 2023

See all articles by Wanjun Cui

Wanjun Cui

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Jizhong Meng

University of Galway

Shun Wang

University of Galway

Zhenhu Hu

Hefei University of Technology

Guangli Liu

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Xinmin Zhan

University of Galway

Abstract

Nutrient recovery from anaerobic digestate through electrodialysis technology (ED) has been investigated and shown high promise, but the removal of 17β-estradiol (E2), which is a natural estrogen and widely found in manure digestate, is not clear. This study examined the mechanism of membrane adsorption and anodic oxidation of E2 during recovering nutrient from manure digestate, and further investigated the performance of Anode-ED in E2 removal. The results showed that the removal of E2 in conventional ED was primarily attributed to membrane adsorption, resulting in no detectable E2 in the product solution. The adsorption capacity of the anion exchange membrane for E2 was significantly higher compared to that of the cation exchange membrane. During Anode-ED operation, E2 was efficiently removed by electrochemical oxidation, in which the chlorination played a primary role. Moreover, the oxidation intermediates of E2 were further removed after 40 min. Even though the carbonate, volatile fatty acid (VFA), and humic acid in the real wastewater have a negative impact on E2 oxidation, the E2 was completely removed from digestate during nutrient recovery in the anode-ED. This study indicates that anode-ED is a promising technology for the removal of E2 during nutrient recovery from digestate.

Keywords: Anode-Electrodialysis, Membrane adsorption, nutrient recovery, Pig manure digestate, 17β-Estradiol

Suggested Citation

Cui, Wanjun and Meng, Jizhong and Wang, Shun and Hu, Zhenhu and Liu, Guangli and Zhan, Xinmin, 17β-Estradiol (E2) Removal in Anode-Electrodialysis (Anode-Ed) During Nutrient Recovery from Pig Manure Digestate. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4481628 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4481628

Wanjun Cui

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

Jizhong Meng

University of Galway ( email )

University Road
Galway
Ireland

Shun Wang

University of Galway ( email )

University Road
Galway
Ireland

Zhenhu Hu

Hefei University of Technology ( email )

193 Tunxi Rd
Baohe
Hefei
China

Guangli Liu

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

Xinmin Zhan (Contact Author)

University of Galway ( email )

Galway
Ireland

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