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A technological, economic and social exploration of phosphate recovery from centralised sewage treatment in a transitioning economy context

Phosphate is an important, non-substitutable nutrient for all life forms and is essential in ensuring universal food security. In the past, waste water treatment works (WWTW) typically installed effluent polishing technologies to eliminate phosphate and lower concentrations of both nitrogen and phos...

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Main Author: Sikosana, M
Other Authors: Von Blottnitz, Harro
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Chemical Engineering 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Sikosana, M
author2 Von Blottnitz, Harro
author_browse Sikosana, M
Von Blottnitz, Harro
author_facet Von Blottnitz, Harro
Sikosana, M
author_sort Sikosana, M
collection Thesis
description Phosphate is an important, non-substitutable nutrient for all life forms and is essential in ensuring universal food security. In the past, waste water treatment works (WWTW) typically installed effluent polishing technologies to eliminate phosphate and lower concentrations of both nitrogen and phosphate to below regulatory levels. More recently, there has been a global shift towards treating waste water as a "water-carried waste", presenting opportunities for both nutrient and energy recovery. South Africa is yet to embrace this shift, as it battles to provide universal access to basic sanitation needs and is faced with massive infrastructure maintenance and upgrading backlogs in the sanitation sector. Mature phosphate recovery technologies that produce high quality struvite for use in food production do exist. However, there is little evidence to indicate that similar phosphate recovery techniques would be economically viable or socially accepted in South Africa. Therefore, this dissertation sets out to investigate the viability of a simpler and cheaper phosphate recovery technology. The dissertation addresses the hypothesis that the South African market is better suited for low quality struvite for use in secondary (non-food) markets and that this would be cheaper than both traditional chemical precipiation (phosphate elimination) methods and high quality struvite production. This dissertation attempts to answer two key questions derived from this hypothesis by means of two separate methodologies. A qualitative methodology explores socio-technical issues to understand the potential of sewage-recovered struvite in the South African markets. This sets out to explore: What space there is for fertilizer production (such as struvite) from human waste in the South African markets? The second research component uses standard engineering economic methods, to investigate the potential for centralized recovery of nutrients through the conceptual design and a techno-economic pre-feasibility assessment of two phosphate recovery options at the largest WWIW in the Western Cape. These options are contrasted with a more traditional chemical precipitation process.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:01.081Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
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publisher Department of Chemical Engineering
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/13750 A technological, economic and social exploration of phosphate recovery from centralised sewage treatment in a transitioning economy context Sikosana, M Von Blottnitz, Harro Randall, Bill Chemical Engineering Phosphate is an important, non-substitutable nutrient for all life forms and is essential in ensuring universal food security. In the past, waste water treatment works (WWTW) typically installed effluent polishing technologies to eliminate phosphate and lower concentrations of both nitrogen and phosphate to below regulatory levels. More recently, there has been a global shift towards treating waste water as a "water-carried waste", presenting opportunities for both nutrient and energy recovery. South Africa is yet to embrace this shift, as it battles to provide universal access to basic sanitation needs and is faced with massive infrastructure maintenance and upgrading backlogs in the sanitation sector. Mature phosphate recovery technologies that produce high quality struvite for use in food production do exist. However, there is little evidence to indicate that similar phosphate recovery techniques would be economically viable or socially accepted in South Africa. Therefore, this dissertation sets out to investigate the viability of a simpler and cheaper phosphate recovery technology. The dissertation addresses the hypothesis that the South African market is better suited for low quality struvite for use in secondary (non-food) markets and that this would be cheaper than both traditional chemical precipiation (phosphate elimination) methods and high quality struvite production. This dissertation attempts to answer two key questions derived from this hypothesis by means of two separate methodologies. A qualitative methodology explores socio-technical issues to understand the potential of sewage-recovered struvite in the South African markets. This sets out to explore: What space there is for fertilizer production (such as struvite) from human waste in the South African markets? The second research component uses standard engineering economic methods, to investigate the potential for centralized recovery of nutrients through the conceptual design and a techno-economic pre-feasibility assessment of two phosphate recovery options at the largest WWIW in the Western Cape. These options are contrasted with a more traditional chemical precipitation process. 2015-08-15T05:30:38Z 2015-08-15T05:30:38Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Eng) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13750 eng application/pdf Department of Chemical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Chemical Engineering
Sikosana, M
A technological, economic and social exploration of phosphate recovery from centralised sewage treatment in a transitioning economy context
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A technological, economic and social exploration of phosphate recovery from centralised sewage treatment in a transitioning economy context
title_full A technological, economic and social exploration of phosphate recovery from centralised sewage treatment in a transitioning economy context
title_fullStr A technological, economic and social exploration of phosphate recovery from centralised sewage treatment in a transitioning economy context
title_full_unstemmed A technological, economic and social exploration of phosphate recovery from centralised sewage treatment in a transitioning economy context
title_short A technological, economic and social exploration of phosphate recovery from centralised sewage treatment in a transitioning economy context
title_sort technological economic and social exploration of phosphate recovery from centralised sewage treatment in a transitioning economy context
topic Chemical Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13750
work_keys_str_mv AT sikosanam atechnologicaleconomicandsocialexplorationofphosphaterecoveryfromcentralisedsewagetreatmentinatransitioningeconomycontext
AT sikosanam technologicaleconomicandsocialexplorationofphosphaterecoveryfromcentralisedsewagetreatmentinatransitioningeconomycontext