Water Science and Technology (Jan 2022)

Nitrogen resource recovery from mature leachate via heat extraction technology: An engineering project application

  • Jianying Xiong,
  • Chen Zhang,
  • Pinjing He,
  • Jun He,
  • Xiaodong Dai,
  • Wudong Li,
  • Xiaoying Yang,
  • Xueting Li,
  • Xiaowen Huang,
  • Jia Feng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2022.003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 85, no. 2
pp. 549 – 561

Abstract

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A large pool of ammonia in mature leachate is challenging to treat with a membrane bioreactor system to meet the discharge Standard for Pollution Control on the Landfill Site of Municipal Solid Waste in China (GB 16889-2008) without external carbon source addition. In this study, an engineering leachate treatment project with a scale of 2,000 m3/d was operated to evaluate the ammonia heat extraction system (AHES), which contains preheat, decomposition, steam-stripping, ammonia recovery, and centrifuge dewatering. The operation results showed that NH3-N concentrations of raw leachate and treated effluent from an ammonia heat extraction system (AHES) were 1,305–2,485 mg/L and 207–541 mg/L, respectively. The ratio of COD/NH3-N increased from 1.40–1.84 to 7.69–28.00. Nitrogen was recovered in the form of NH4HCO3 by the ammonia recovery tower with the introduction of CO2, wherein the mature leachate can offer 37% CO2 consumption. The unit consumptions of steam and power were 8.0% and 2.66 kWh/m3 respectively, and the total operation cost of AHES was 2.06 USD per cubic metre of leachate. These results confirm that heat extraction is an efficient and cost-effective technology for the recovery of nitrogen resource from mature leachate. HIGHLIGHTS A leachate treatment engineering project with a scale of 2,000 m3/d was introduced.; AHES was developed for nitrogen resource recovery from mature leachate.; Nitrogen resource was recovered via the formation of NH4HCO3.; The comprehensive operation cost of AHES was 13.11 RMB/m3 of leachate.;

Keywords