Abstract
Distributed solar-enabled nitrogen capture from urine helps manage the nitrogen cycle and increases fertilizer, sanitation, and electricity access. We provide proof-of-concept for a Photovoltaic/Thermal Electrochemical Stripping (ECS) system, known as Solar-ECS, that recovers ammonium sulfate fertilizer from real urine independently from an electricity grid. Controlling photovoltaic currents and extracting waste heat to cool the solar panel while heating ECS enabled 59.3% ± 3.6% more power production and improved ammonia recovery efficiency by 22.4% ± 7.4%. The added heat accelerated ammonia volatilization (the rate-limiting step of ECS), while controlled currents reduced energy use by 2.24 ± 0.25 kJ/g N per excess mA/cm2. A new process model for ECS operation at different currents and temperatures was proposed and applied to estimate possible fertilizer revenues of up to $2.13/kg N based on US markets. By advancing recovery of high-purity commodity chemicals from underutilized wastewaters, this work supports United Nations Sustainable Development Goals for zero hunger, clean water and sanitation, clean energy, and responsible production.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information for: Prototyping and Modeling a Photovoltaic/thermal Electrochemical Stripping System for Distributed Urine Nitrogen Recovery
Description
Additional figures and context for experimental insights and modeling work.
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