Science Inventory

Nutrient circularity to abate nitrogen pollution: Techno-economic assessment of nitrogen recovery systems for livestock facilities

Citation:

Martin-Hernandez, E., C. Montero-Rueda, Gerardo J. Ruiz-Mercado, AND M. Martin. Nutrient circularity to abate nitrogen pollution: Techno-economic assessment of nitrogen recovery systems for livestock facilities. The American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) Annual Meeting, N/A, OH, November 07 - 12, 2021.

Impact/Purpose:

Multiple environmental challenges must be handled as a consequence of the industrialization of agricultural and farming activities: depletion of soil nutrients and organic matter due to mono-cropping practices, excessive and inefficient use of synthetic fertilizers to maintain high cropping yields, spatial concentration and improper management of livestock manure, biodiversity loss, nutrient pollution of waters, ecosystems degradation, etc. In this work, a systematic review and techno-economic analysis of the state-of-the-art technologies for nitrogen recovery from livestock waste is carried out through the development of modules for the calculation of the energy and mass balances, nutrient recovery yield, and techno-economic evaluation. The aim is to identify the most efficient technology to close the nutrient loop from livestock to crops, and the optimal design and operating conditions for its implementation consistently with local environmental sensitivity to water nutrient pollution. The obtained outcomes are essential for Program Office and Regional stakeholders when performing a multicriteria decision-making approach to deploy the optimal systems for nitrogen recovery considering the livestock facility size, type of livestock, its economic performance, local ecosystem conditions, and the availability of effective incentive policies to encourage the deployment of these facilities.

Description:

Since the XIX century, the agricultural sector has experienced an accelerated industrialization progression pursuing its intensification and satisfy the demand for food production and agricultural products, i.e., increasing the agricultural production per unit of input resources (land, labor, time, fertilizer, seeds, and investment). During the last decades, the agricultural intensification is driven by a sustained population increment, a worldwide average income growth, and the trade liberalization and logistics advancements leading the transnational trade of products. However, multiple environmental challenges must be faced as a consequence of the industrialization of the agricultural and farming activities: depletion of soil nutrients and organic matter due to mono-cropping practices, excessive and inefficient use of synthetic fertilizers to maintain high cropping yields, spatial concentration and inappropriate management of livestock manure, biodiversity loss, ecosystems degradation, etc. Focusing in the context of current nutrient management, the unbalanced use of synthetic fertilizers and the excessive organic waste generation from livestock facilities have decoupled a previous balanced scenario where the organic waste from livestock activities was used as a nutrient and organic matter supply for growing crops. This has created a dependency on mineral (phosphorus) and synthetic (nitrogen) fertilizers, and the efficient management of animal manure has become a critical need for livestock operations. Therefore, there is a disconnection between locations with excessive nutrient content from organic waste (livestock facilities), and croplands demanding nutrients to keep high yield rates. Also, due to the sparse location between facilities with in-excess nutrient content organic waste (including manure and digestate) and croplands with nutrient needs, the transportation of these wastes for nutrient redistribution is challenging and expensive. Therefore, the implementation of technologies and processes for the recovery of nutrients in a cost-effective form suitable for easy transportation and use in croplands is of utmost importance. Also, this would aid to restore the circularity of agricultural nutrients usage, disrupted by industrial practices. In this work, a systematic review and techno-economic analysis of the state-of-the-art technologies for nitrogen recovery from livestock waste is carried out through the development of modules for the calculation of the energy and mass balances, nutrient recovery yield, and techno-economic evaluation. The aim is to identify the most adequate technology to close the nutrient loop from livestock to crops, and the optimal design and operating conditions for its implementation. The processing and management of livestock waste involve all stages from waste collection to the production of the nutrient-rich product: manure preconditioning, optional anaerobic digestion of manure and biogas valorization, solid-liquid separation of manure or digestate, and nutrients recovery. The assessment of technologies is carried out with special emphasis on the resiliency of the technology selected for each scenario. This is because of the existence of multiple variable factors affecting the performance of nutrient recovery facilities, e.g., the variability of waste composition, the prices of the products obtained, and the cost of the utilities required by each unit. Therefore, a flexible framework capable of assessing changes in input parameters is developed, allowing the study of the impact of the fluctuation of these variables on the results, the techno-economic performance of the different nutrient recovery technologies, and the selection of the optimal configuration.

URLs/Downloads:

NUTRIENT CIRCULARITY TO ABATE WATER POLLUTION_ AICHE21.PDF  (PDF, NA pp,  4296.886  KB,  about PDF)

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ SLIDE)
Product Published Date:11/12/2021
Record Last Revised:08/22/2022
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 355481