Phosphorus Recovery from Hydroponics Waste Solutions and its Economic Potential – Supplementary Material
  • Description

    This dataset contains precipitation of nutrients present in hydroponic waste nutrient solution. Tables and figures contained in a word document to support the publication of the article titled Phosphorus Recovery from Hydroponics Waste Nutrient Solutions and its Economic Potential.

    Nutrient management, particularly phosphorus, is crucial for global food security due to its limited availability. This study investigates the extraction of phosphorus from hydroponic waste nutrient solutions (HWNS) using samples from various hydroponic farms. The results display elevated phosphorus levels, peaking at 70mg/L and a median of 20mg/L, in conjunction with a high median calcium concentration of 220 mg/L. This combination enhances the potential for efficient calcium phosphate precipitation. At a pH of 9.5, phosphorus removal reached consistently high levels, exceeding 94% and achieving a median value of 97.6%. The economic value of the recovered phosphorus was then compared to rock phosphates. Through chemical precipitation with micro-calcium phosphate, economic evaluations determined that to achieve production costs comparable to or below the market value of calcium phosphate, HWNS should contain a phosphorus concentration of at least 16 mg P/L.


    • Data publication title Phosphorus Recovery from Hydroponics Waste Solutions and its Economic Potential – Supplementary Material
    • Description

      This dataset contains precipitation of nutrients present in hydroponic waste nutrient solution. Tables and figures contained in a word document to support the publication of the article titled Phosphorus Recovery from Hydroponics Waste Nutrient Solutions and its Economic Potential.

      Nutrient management, particularly phosphorus, is crucial for global food security due to its limited availability. This study investigates the extraction of phosphorus from hydroponic waste nutrient solutions (HWNS) using samples from various hydroponic farms. The results display elevated phosphorus levels, peaking at 70mg/L and a median of 20mg/L, in conjunction with a high median calcium concentration of 220 mg/L. This combination enhances the potential for efficient calcium phosphate precipitation. At a pH of 9.5, phosphorus removal reached consistently high levels, exceeding 94% and achieving a median value of 97.6%. The economic value of the recovered phosphorus was then compared to rock phosphates. Through chemical precipitation with micro-calcium phosphate, economic evaluations determined that to achieve production costs comparable to or below the market value of calcium phosphate, HWNS should contain a phosphorus concentration of at least 16 mg P/L.


    • Data type dataset
    • Keywords
      • Nutrients management
      • Chemical precipitation
      • Calcium phosphate recovery
      • Alkali Treatment
      • Rock phosphate
      • Amorphous Calcium Phosphate (ACP)
    • Funding source
    • Grant number(s)
      • -
    • FoR codes
      • 401106 - Waste management, reduction, reuse and recycling
      SEO codes
      • 180308 - Surface water quantification, allocation and impact of depletion
      • 180307 - Rehabilitation or conservation of fresh, ground and surface water environments
      Temporal (time) coverage
    • Start date 2023/03/01
    • End date 2023/10/31
    • Time period
       
      Spatial (location,mapping) coverage
    • Locations
      • Western Sydney
      • Wallacia
      • Rossmore
      • Balgowlah
      • Parramatta
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      Citation Malkawi, Suhaib; Hagare, Dharmappa; Maheshwari, Basant (2024): Phosphorus Recovery from Hydroponics Waste Solutions and its Economic Potential – Supplementary Material. Western Sydney University. https://doi.org/10.26183/a9de-xp42