Treatment of phosphate-containing wastewater
10486994 ยท 2019-11-26
Assignee
Inventors
- Pierre Cote (Dundas, CA)
- Ahren BRITTON (North Vancouver, CA)
- Ram Prasad Melahalli Sathyanarayana (Lithia, FL, US)
- Rhonda Maria Hyslop (North Vancouver, CA)
Cpc classification
C02F1/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D61/029
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D61/026
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F9/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C02F2103/007
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D2311/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C01B25/45
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D2311/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2311/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F1/20
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D2311/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
C02F9/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C02F1/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D61/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C01B25/45
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method for treating, and recovering phosphate compounds from, phosphate-containing wastewater. The method includes the steps of: (a) removing fluoride from the wastewater; (b) recovering a phosphate compound from the wastewater by maintaining supersaturation conditions for the phosphate compound; and (c) polishing the wastewater. A silica removal step may be optionally performed after step (a) and before step (b).
Claims
1. A method for treating, and recovering phosphate compounds from, wastewater, the method comprising: (a) measuring, precipitating and removing fluoride from the wastewater by raising the pH of the wastewater by adding a calcium-containing base with a stoichiometric amount of calcium to precipitate the fluoride, wherein the pH does not promote precipitation of phosphates, and then further raising the pH of the wastewater by adding one or more calcium-free bases; (b) recovering struvite from the wastewater from which fluoride has been removed by maintaining supersaturation conditions for the struvite; and (c) polishing the wastewater, wherein step (c) comprises subjecting the wastewater from step (b) to a membrane treatment system to obtain a concentrate and a permeate comprising treated effluent.
2. A method according to claim 1 wherein the membrane treatment system comprises a two stage membrane treatment.
3. A method according to claim 2 comprising lowering the pH to about pH 3 to 5 prior to the two stage membrane treatment.
4. A method according to claim 2 comprising removing suspended solids by filtration prior to the two stage membrane treatment.
5. A method according to claim 1 wherein prior to step (b) the wastewater is subjected to a first membrane treatment to obtain a first concentrate comprising divalent ions and a first permeate comprising monovalent ions, wherein the first concentrate defines feed for step (b).
6. A method according to claim 5 wherein wastewater from step (b) is recirculated to step (a).
7. A method according to claim 5 wherein the first permeate is subjected to a second membrane treatment to obtain a second concentrate comprising monovalent ions and a second permeate comprising effluent.
8. A method according to claim 7 wherein the second membrane treatment comprises reverse osmosis.
9. A method according to claim 7 comprising removing ammonia from the second permeate.
10. A method according to claim 9 wherein removing ammonia comprises subjecting the second permeate to ion exchange.
11. A method according to claim 10 wherein ammonia-containing liquid of the ion exchange is recirculated to step (b).
12. A method according to claim 5 wherein the first membrane treatment comprises nanofiltration.
13. A method according to claim 5 comprising lowering the pH to about pH 3 to 5 prior to the first membrane treatment.
14. A method according to claim 5 comprising removing suspended solids by filtration prior to the first membrane treatment.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The accompanying drawings illustrate non-limiting embodiments of the invention.
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DESCRIPTION
(8) Throughout the following description, specific details are set forth in order to provide a more thorough understanding of the invention. However, the invention may be practiced without these particulars. In other instances, well-known elements have not been shown or described in detail to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the invention. Accordingly, the specification and drawings are to be regarded in an illustrative, rather than a restrictive, sense.
(9) Some embodiments of the invention relate to methods for treating phosphate-containing wastewater while simultaneously recovering commercially useful phosphate compounds. Bases are used to neutralize the acidity of phosphate-containing wastewater. Cations from the bases are used to remove contaminants and recover phosphate compounds. Excess cations may be recirculated to maximize contaminant removal and recovery of phosphate compounds.
(10) Some embodiments of the invention relate to treatment processes wherein the phosphate-containing wastewater is phosphogypsum pond water and the phosphate compound is recovered in the form of granular struvite. These embodiments coincide with an aspect of the invention having significant commercial utility. The scope of the invention, however, is not limited to these embodiments.
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(13) Fluoride removal step 10 comprises raising the pH of the wastewater with one or more bases to a desired pH that promotes precipitation of contaminants such as fluoride and/or sulphates but not precipitation of phosphates. In some embodiments the pH may be raised to about pH 3.0-4.0. in some embodiments the degree to which the pH is raised may vary with the composition of the wastewater. Fluoride removal step 10 results in relatively dense precipitates that settle well. The precipitates may for example be settled and separated in a pond, a clarifier, a separation tank, or the like.
(14) The base used in fluoride removal step 10 may be a calcium-containing base. The calcium-containing base may be added in an amount such that the calcium added to any pre-existing calcium in the wastewater results in a concentration of calcium ions sufficient to cause precipitation of compounds such as fluorite, calcium fluorosilicate, calcium sulphate, and the like while being insufficient to precipitate significant amounts of calcium phosphate. This may be achieved by adding sufficient calcium into the wastewater solution at a rate such that the product of the calcium ion concentration, the concentration of a fluorine-containing ionic species and the concentrations of any other components of a calcium salt exceeds the k.sub.sp for the calcium salt without being so high as to cause significant precipitation of calcium phosphate. The total amount of calcium added in step 10 is desirably sufficient to cause precipitation of the bulk of the fluoride in the wastewater in step 10. For example, a stoichiometric amount of calcium may be introduced during step 10. As shown in
(15) Alternatively or additionally, one or more calcium-free bases may be added to raise the pH sufficiently to precipitate the fluoride at fluoride removal step 10. In some embodiments, the calcium-free base may be selected on the basis of a phosphate compound that is desired to be recovered at phosphate recovery step 30. For example, if the phosphate compound to be recovered is or comprises struvite, as shown in
(16) Bases containing, magnesium and/or ammonia may be added to simultaneously raise pH of the wastewater and increase the concentration of magnesium and/or ammonia cations to facilitate struvite production in a subsequent step. For example, magnesium oxide may be used to add magnesium in a quantity sufficient to raise a concentration of magnesium ions to or toward a concentration desired to later precipitate struvite. Addition of a magnesium-containing base may also assist in removal of fluoride ions by promoting precipitation of fluoride as sellaite (MgF.sub.2).
(17) In some embodiments a mixture of two or more calcium-free bases may be used, to raise the pH at fluoride removal step 10. Bases may be added in a sequence that accounts for pH-dependent differences in solubility of the bases. For example, the base with better dissolution at a lower pH may be added before the base with lower dissolution at the lower pH. For example, if magnesium oxide and ammonium hydroxide are used, then magnesium oxide may be added first (because its dissolution is better at lower pH), and then ammonium hydroxide added next to reach the desired pH for fluoride removal.
(18) Following fluoride removal step 10, process 1 may include a silica removal step 20. Silica removal may be desirable in some embodiments to avoid silica gel formation, which may interfere with recovery of phosphate compounds (e.g. struvite crystallization) at phosphate recovery step 30. In some embodiments, silica may be removed by adding base to hydrolyze the silica and then allowing, the silica to settle. Step 20 may conveniently be performed in a settling tank or the like. Settled silica may be removed. In some embodiments, silica may be hydrolyzed by adding a base to adjust the to pH to a pH optimal for subsequent phosphate recovery step 30. In some embodiments, the pH may be at least about 5 prior to phosphate recovery step 30.
(19) One or more bases that contain cations (e.g. magnesium and/or ammonia) that will enhance phosphate precipitation at phosphate recovery step 30 may be used to raise the pH for silica removal step 20. As shown in
(20) Silica removal step 20 is unnecessary in some embodiments. Since silica gel formation tends to occur only at higher silica concentrations (e.g. Si>100 ppm), embodiments of the invention for processing wastewater with low silica concentrations may not require the silica removal step. Even if the silica concentration is high enough for gel formation, the hydraulic retention time of the gel formation is typically on the order of hours. In contrast, the hydraulic retention time for phosphate precipitation at phosphate recovery step 30 may be shorter than this. For example, the hydraulic retention time for struvite formation is typically less than 1 hour, although with a high concentration feed the hydraulic retention time may be significantly longer in embodiments incorporating recirculation as described below. Silica gel formation and the need for silica removal prior to phosphate recovery step 30 may therefore be avoided even in some embodiments that process wastewater with higher silica concentrations. In some embodiments where silica is not removed prior to phosphate recovery step 30, silica is hydrolyzed during phosphorus recovery step 30 and eventually removed downstream.
(21) Silica removal step 20 is followed by phosphate recovery step 30. As shown in
(22) Supersaturation conditions for the phosphate compound are maintained to recover desired phosphate compounds during phosphate recovery step 30. Maintaining supersaturation conditions may for example include: maintaining a supersaturation ratio of 2 to 5 for struvite; maintaining a suitable pH for example by controllably introducing a base and/or air stripping; maintaining phosphate concentration higher than concentrations of other components of the phosphate compound; and/or controllably introducing compounds comprising at least one of the other components of the desired phosphate compound.
(23) Supersaturation conditions for struvite may be determined in relation to the struvite solubility product K.sub.sp given by:
K.sub.sp=[Mg.sup.2+].sub.eq[NH.sub.4.sup.+].sub.eq[PO.sub.4.sup.3].sub.eq
where the activities of the different species (i.e. [Mg.sup.2+].sub.eq, [NH.sub.4.sup.+].sub.eq, and [PO.sub.4.sup.3].sub.eq) are measured respectively as soluble magnesium, ammonia and orthophosphate at equilibrium. The supersaturation ratio (SSR) may be given by:
SSR=[Mg.sup.2+][NH.sub.4.sup.+][PO.sub.4.sup.3]/K.sub.sp,
Increases in the SSR drive crystallization of struvite.
(24) In the case of struvite recovery, the other components mentioned above are magnesium and ammonia. During struvite recovery in the embodiment illustrated in
(25) The methods described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,622,047 may be modified and/or selected to optimize phosphate recovery step 30 in various ways including one or more of the following. i. The hydraulic retention time during struvite recovery may be extended since phosphogypsum pond water tends to have a much higher concentration of phosphorus compared to municipal wastewater and pellet formation is rate limiting. This may be achieved, for example, by increasing a recycling ratio (a proportion of wastewater that is recycled to wastewater that exits phosphate recovery step 30). ii Ammonia may be added in the form of ammonium hydroxide (or alternatively as anhydrous ammonia or ammonium chloride plus caustic for pH adjustment). iii. The flow rate of the phosphogypsum pond water feed may be decreased relative to the flow rate of wastewater being recycled in phosphate removal step 30 to achieve the desired supersaturation ratio of 2-5. iv. Phosphate may be kept in excess so as to minimize the amounts of magnesium and ammonium lost in the final effluent
(26) Following phosphate recovery step 30 the wastewater undergoes polishing step 40 before being discharged as treated effluent. In some embodiments, polishing step 40 may involve one or more chemical treatment steps.
(27) In the embodiment shown in
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(30) First stage membrane 150 may be configured to reject divalent ions (e.g. phosphate, sulphate, magnesium) and let monovalent ions flow through (e.g. sodium, chloride, fluoride, ammonia) to second stage membrane 160. The first stage membrane may for example comprise a reverse osmosis (RO) or nanofiltration (NF) membrane. In some embodiments, the low pH concentrates (stream A) from first stage membrane 150 may be recirculated to fluoride removal step 110. As shown in
(31) Second stage membrane 160 may be configured to reject monovalent ions (e.g. sodium, chloride, fluoride). As shown in
(32) An ion exchange (IX) resin bed 170 may be provided to remove ammonia from the second stage membrane permeate before discharge as treated effluent. Ion exchange regeneration liquid containing the ammonia (stream C) may be recirculated to phosphate recovery step 130 to provide pH adjustment and ammonia for recovery of phosphate compounds.
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(34) Following silica removal step 220, wastewater is directed first stage membrane 250. In a mariner similar to process 100, the wastewater may be acidified and prefiltered prior to first stage membrane 250. Concentrate from the first stage membrane is fed to phosphate recovery step 230. This concentrate may contain most of the phosphate at about twice the concentration compared to the feed for the phosphate recovery steps in process 1 and 100. Concentrated phosphate may improve the conditions for the recovery of phosphate compounds in some cases. The other elements of the processes illustrated in
(35) Recirculation of concentrate streams A, containing for example excess magnesium, and concentrate stream C, containing for example excess ammonia, to upstream steps may result in up to complete recovery of these components into recovered phosphate compounds, for example as struvite.
(36) As will be apparent to those skilled in the art in the light of the foregoing disclosure, many alterations and modifications are possible in the practice of this invention without departing from the spirit or scope thereof. For example: i. The methods for ammonia removal described for the ammonia removal step of process 1 and the ion exchange method for ammonia removal in processes 100 and 200 are interchangeable. ii. Process 1 may be modified to provide recirculation. For example ammonia recovered at the ammonia removal step may be recirculated to phosphate recovery step 30. iii. The two-stage membrane treatment may be substituted with a single membrane (e.g. reverse osmosis only) or more than two membranes (e.g. the two-stage membrane treatment preceded by microfiltration and/or ultrafiltration membranes). iv. Individual features of the various embodiments disclosed herein may be combined with one another to create further example embodiments. For example, polishing stage 40 of
(37) The following example provides results of laboratory scale testing of some embodiments of the invention.
EXAMPLE 1
(38) Raw pond water samples were tested in three stages: 1) F removal with Ca, 2) pH increase, and 3) struvite precipitation.
(39) In Stage 1, CaCO.sub.3 and Ca(OH).sub.2 were added to 2 L and 3 L samples of pond water, mixed for 60 minutes, settled for 30 minutes, then filtered and supernatants analyzed to evaluate the effect of adding the bases on both pH and the concentrations of F and PO.sub.4.Ca(OH).sub.2 was added in both solid and slurried form (results shown for slurried form only). Ca:F molar ratios of 0.5 and 0.6 for both reagents were tested, respectively representing the stoichiometric amount and a 20% excess amount.
(40) Both CaCO.sub.3 and Ca(OH).sub.2 reagents raised the pH to between about 2.5-3.5 after 1 hour of mixing. CaCO.sub.3 may be preferred in some embodiments. Test results showed that with CaCO.sub.3 the F removal at 0.6 Ca:F molar ratio was lower than with Ca(OH).sub.2 at 0.6 Ca:F molar ratio but so were the PO.sub.4 and NH.sub.3 losses. For the remaining stages CaCO.sub.3 at 0.6 Ca:F molar ratio was used.
(41) 24 hours after completion of the test, more solids had precipitated in the filtered supernatant, and the SO.sub.4 concentration had decreased along with the Ca concentration, indicating gypsum formation.
(42) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Stage 1 results F PO4P NH3N SO4S Ca ID mg/L mg/L mg/L mg/L mg/L pH Pond 8800 9088.5 1215 9375 1222 1.17 water J1 0.5 7390 8262 1020 2918 4701 3.04 CaCO.sub.3 J2 0.6 5197 7624 1085 3192 2091 3.23 CaCO.sub.3 J3 0.5 5686 7888 1024 3877 2831 3.49 Ca(OH).sub.2 J4 0.6 4409 7517 1022 7096 2616 2.66 Ca(OH).sub.2 J1 % 16.0% 9.1% 16.0% 68.9% removal J2 % 40.9% 16.1% 10.7% 66.0% removal J3 % 35.4% 13.2% 15.7% 58.6% removal J4 % 49.9% 17.3% 15.9% 24.3% removal
(43) In Stage 2, Mg(OH).sub.2 was added On slurried 40 wt % form) to the 500 mL and 1250 mL samples of Stage 1 supernatant in Mg:P molar ratios of 0.8, 0.9, and 1.0, to raise the pH of the solution nearer the pH required for struvite precipitation and also to put Mg ions in solution. Also, MgCl.sub.2 was added in 1.0 Mg:P ratio to compare the effects of adding a non-basic Mg source at this stage.
(44) The Mg compounds were added immediately after the completion of a repeated Stage 1 test, to prevent Ca loss through gypsum precipitation. The solutions were mixed for 60 minutes and settled for 15 minutes.
(45) The Mg(OH).sub.2 raised the pH to 4.5-5.5, and caused nearly complete removal (>90%) of both Ca and F. A substantial amount of PO.sub.4 was also removed, but the quantity remaining was still high and sufficient for struvite production downstream. A substantial amount of the added Mg was also removed, in this stage. The MgCl.sub.2 did not raise the pH but slightly lowered it, and had very little effect on either F removal or P loss. Increasing the Mg:P molar ratio from 0.8 to 1.0 increased F removal by only 2.8% but increased PO.sub.4 losses by 11.5%, 0.8 Mg:P was selected for use in Stage 3.
(46) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Stage 2 results F PO4P NH3N SO4S Ca Mg ID mg/L mg/L mg/L mg/L mg/L mg/L pH Pond water 8800 9089 1215 9375 1222 551 1.17 A 0.6 CaCO.sub.3 6020 7904 1152 7656 5993 502 3.06 J1 0.8 Mg(OH)2 483 5421 1135 7656 536 2208 4.47 J2 0.9 Mg(OH)2 370 4993 1123 7656 366 2234 4.86 J3 1.0 Mg(OH)2 312 4513 1068 7656 230 2242 5.27 J4 1.0 MgCl2 5430 7583 417 8975 5995 6204.7 2.79 A % removal 31.6% 13.0% 5.2% 18.3% 8.9% J1 % removal 92.0% 31.4% 1.5% 0% 91.0% J2 % removal 93.9% 36.8% 2.5% 0% 93.9% J3 % removal 94.8% 42.9% 7.3% 0% 96.2% 34 % removal 3.2% 4.7% 6.1% 0% 0% J1 overall removal 94.5% 40.4% 6.6% 18.3% J2 overall removal 95.8% 45.1% 7.6% 18.3% J3 overall removal 96.5% 50.3% 12.1% 18.3% J4 overall removal 38.3% 16.6% 65.7% 4.3%
(47) In Stage 3, NH.sub.4OH was added to 500 mL samples of Stage 2 supernatant in N:P molar ratios of 0.8 and 1.0, then NaOH was used to raise the pH above 7.0. As the Mg:P ratio was approximately 0.5:1 due to the Mg loss in Stage 2, a P recovery of near 50% would be expected if the P were primarily forming struvite. The Mg was 99% removed, showing that the reaction proceeded as tar as it could given the Mg limits, and the P removal was near 58%. Struvite precipitation in wastewater is Mg limited as well, and MgCl.sub.2 or other sources of soluble Mg can be added.
(48) TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Stage 3 results: F PO4P NH3N SO4S Ca Mg Final ID mg/L mg/L mg/L mg/L mg/L mg/L pH pH Pond water 8800 9088.5 1215 9375 1222 551.1 1.17 J1 0.6 CaCO.sub.3 5608 7957 444* 6099 5450 496.94 3.13 J2 0.8 Mg(OH).sub.2 477 5194 412 8756 554.9 2080.6 4.62 J3-1 0.8 NH.sub.4OH 277 2190 558 8948 67.6 13.158 5.52 7.40 J3-2 1.0 NH.sub.4OH 267 2150 788 6729 65.7 13.0 5.84 7.36 J1 % removal 36.3% 12.4% .sup.63.5% 34.9% 9.8% J2 % removal 91.5% 34.7% .sup.7.2% 0% 89.8% J3-1 % removal 41.9% 57.8% 0% 87.8% 99.4% J3-2 % removal 44.0% 58.6% 23.1% 88.2% 99.4% J3-1 overall removal 96.9% 75.9% J3-2 overall removal 97.0% 76.3% *This number (and the ones below it) are anomalous, and should be similar to the numbers obtained at the end of the Stage 2 test wherein ammonia levels were about 1100 mg/L.
EXAMPLE 2
(49) An overall pH test was also conducted 250 mL of the pond water sample was placed in a beaker. The blade of an overhead mixer was placed in the sample and rotated at 70 rpm 6.95 g CaCO.sub.3 was added to obtain a 0.6 Ca:F ratio. The pH was monitored every 15 minutes. The pH was recorded at 60 minutes.
(50) 3.95 g Mg(OH).sub.2 slurried in 5.4 g water was added to obtain a 1:1 Mg:P ratio, based on previous jar test results from Example 1. The pH was monitored every 15 minutes. The pH was recorded at 60 minutes.
(51) 2.16g dry basis/7.17g 30 wt % NH.sub.4OH was slowly added to obtain a 1:1 NH.sub.4OH:P ratio based on P after the CaCO.sub.3 precipitation.
(52) TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 5 pH test results ppt with NH4OH ppt with CaCo3 ppt with Mg(OH)2 Cum. NH4OH Time Time Time dry basis (min.) pH (min.) pH (min.) pH added 0 1.8 0 3.09 0 5.17 0.54 15 3.2 15 4.31 10 5.85 1.08 30 3.2 30 4.77 20 7.61 45 3.2 45 5.03 60 7.3 2.16 60 3.1 60 5.17 120 9.49
REFERENCES
(53) Kennedy, G. A., Soroczak, M. M. and Clayton, J. D., Chemistry of Gypsum Pond Systems, Florida Institute of Phosphate Research (FIPR) Project #85-05-025R, 1991. Perpich, B, Jr., Soule, C., Zamani Timchak, L., Uebelhoer, G., Nagghappan, L. and Helwick, R., Mobile Wastewater Treatment Helps Remediate Concentrated Acidic Process Water at Fertilizer Plant Florida Water Resources Journal, July 2005.