Fertilizer Effect of Phosphorus Recycling Products

Between 2004 and 2011 the German Government funded 17 different projects to develop techniques of phosphorus recycling from wastewater, sewage sludges, and sewage sludge ashes. Several procedures had been tested, such as precipitation, adsorption, crystallization, nano-filtration, electro-dialysis,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wilhelm Römer, Bernd Steingrobe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/4/1166
id doaj-49e201190ddf4f49b30d1fc7056de5da
record_format Article
spelling doaj-49e201190ddf4f49b30d1fc7056de5da2020-11-24T22:51:10ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-04-01104116610.3390/su10041166su10041166Fertilizer Effect of Phosphorus Recycling ProductsWilhelm Römer0Bernd Steingrobe1Department of Crop Sciences, Section Plant Nutrition and Crop Physiology, Georg-August-University Göttingen, Carl-Sprengel-Weg 1, 37075 Göttingen, GermanyDepartment of Crop Sciences, Section Plant Nutrition and Crop Physiology, Georg-August-University Göttingen, Carl-Sprengel-Weg 1, 37075 Göttingen, GermanyBetween 2004 and 2011 the German Government funded 17 different projects to develop techniques of phosphorus recycling from wastewater, sewage sludges, and sewage sludge ashes. Several procedures had been tested, such as precipitation, adsorption, crystallization, nano-filtration, electro-dialysis, wet oxidation, pyrolysis, ion exchange, or bioleaching. From these techniques, 32 recycling products were tested by five different institutes for their agronomic efficiency, that is, their plant availability, mainly in pot experiments. This manuscript summarizes and compares these results to evaluate the suitability of different technical approaches to recycle P from wastes into applicable fertilizers. In total, 17 products of recycled sewage sludge ashes (SSA), one meat and bone meal ash, one sinter product of meat and bone meal, one cupola furnace slag, nine Ca phosphates from crystallization or from precipitation, Seaborne-Ca-phosphates, Seaborne-Mg-phosphate, and 3 different struvites were tested in comparison to controls with water soluble P, that is, either single super phosphate (SSP) or triple super phosphate (TSP). Sandy and loamy soils (pH: 4.7–6.8; CAL-P: 33–49 ppm) were used. The dominant test plant was maize. Phosphorus uptake from fertilizer was calculated by the P content of fertilized plants minus P content of unfertilized plants. Calculated uptake from all products was set in relation to uptake from water soluble P fertilizers (SSP or TSP) as a reference value (=100%). The following results were found: (1) plants took up less than 25% P in 65% of all SSA (15 products); (2) 6 products (26%) resulted in P uptake of 25 and 50% relatively to water soluble P. Only one Mg-P product resulted in an uptake of 67%. With cupola furnace slag, 24% P uptake was reached on sandy soil and nearly the same value as TSP on loamy soil. The uptake results of Ca phosphates were between 0 and 50%. Mg-P products from precipitation processes consistently showed a better P supply in relation to comparable Ca-P compounds. With struvite the same P uptake as for water soluble P was reached. The fertilizer effect of the tested P recycling products can clearly be differentiated: TSP = struvite > Mg-P = sinter-P > Ca-P, cupola-slag > thermally treated sewage sludge ashes > meat-and-bone meal ash = Fe-P.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/4/1166phosphorus recyclingphosphorus fertilizersewage sludge ashmeat and bone meal ashplant ashcalcium phosphatesmagnesium phosphatesmagnesium-ammonium-phosphatestruvite
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wilhelm Römer
Bernd Steingrobe
spellingShingle Wilhelm Römer
Bernd Steingrobe
Fertilizer Effect of Phosphorus Recycling Products
Sustainability
phosphorus recycling
phosphorus fertilizer
sewage sludge ash
meat and bone meal ash
plant ash
calcium phosphates
magnesium phosphates
magnesium-ammonium-phosphate
struvite
author_facet Wilhelm Römer
Bernd Steingrobe
author_sort Wilhelm Römer
title Fertilizer Effect of Phosphorus Recycling Products
title_short Fertilizer Effect of Phosphorus Recycling Products
title_full Fertilizer Effect of Phosphorus Recycling Products
title_fullStr Fertilizer Effect of Phosphorus Recycling Products
title_full_unstemmed Fertilizer Effect of Phosphorus Recycling Products
title_sort fertilizer effect of phosphorus recycling products
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Between 2004 and 2011 the German Government funded 17 different projects to develop techniques of phosphorus recycling from wastewater, sewage sludges, and sewage sludge ashes. Several procedures had been tested, such as precipitation, adsorption, crystallization, nano-filtration, electro-dialysis, wet oxidation, pyrolysis, ion exchange, or bioleaching. From these techniques, 32 recycling products were tested by five different institutes for their agronomic efficiency, that is, their plant availability, mainly in pot experiments. This manuscript summarizes and compares these results to evaluate the suitability of different technical approaches to recycle P from wastes into applicable fertilizers. In total, 17 products of recycled sewage sludge ashes (SSA), one meat and bone meal ash, one sinter product of meat and bone meal, one cupola furnace slag, nine Ca phosphates from crystallization or from precipitation, Seaborne-Ca-phosphates, Seaborne-Mg-phosphate, and 3 different struvites were tested in comparison to controls with water soluble P, that is, either single super phosphate (SSP) or triple super phosphate (TSP). Sandy and loamy soils (pH: 4.7–6.8; CAL-P: 33–49 ppm) were used. The dominant test plant was maize. Phosphorus uptake from fertilizer was calculated by the P content of fertilized plants minus P content of unfertilized plants. Calculated uptake from all products was set in relation to uptake from water soluble P fertilizers (SSP or TSP) as a reference value (=100%). The following results were found: (1) plants took up less than 25% P in 65% of all SSA (15 products); (2) 6 products (26%) resulted in P uptake of 25 and 50% relatively to water soluble P. Only one Mg-P product resulted in an uptake of 67%. With cupola furnace slag, 24% P uptake was reached on sandy soil and nearly the same value as TSP on loamy soil. The uptake results of Ca phosphates were between 0 and 50%. Mg-P products from precipitation processes consistently showed a better P supply in relation to comparable Ca-P compounds. With struvite the same P uptake as for water soluble P was reached. The fertilizer effect of the tested P recycling products can clearly be differentiated: TSP = struvite > Mg-P = sinter-P > Ca-P, cupola-slag > thermally treated sewage sludge ashes > meat-and-bone meal ash = Fe-P.
topic phosphorus recycling
phosphorus fertilizer
sewage sludge ash
meat and bone meal ash
plant ash
calcium phosphates
magnesium phosphates
magnesium-ammonium-phosphate
struvite
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/4/1166
work_keys_str_mv AT wilhelmromer fertilizereffectofphosphorusrecyclingproducts
AT berndsteingrobe fertilizereffectofphosphorusrecyclingproducts
_version_ 1725670908644818944