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Characteristics of vegetable crop cultivation and nutrient releasing with struvite as a slow-release fertilizer.

Abstract
Struvite precipitation is an effective method to remove and recover ammonia and phosphate from livestock wastewater. Struvite has properties similar to those of the traditional ammonium-phosphate fertilizer, which does not burn the roots owing to its slow-release characteristics. Struvite is an effective fertilizer as its nutrient-releasing rate is very slow. But the release rate of ammonia and phosphate in soil depends on the size of crystals. In this study, the nutrient-releasing pattern of three types of struvite crystals and liquid fertilizer was compared using soil column. X-Ray fluorescence spectrometry was conducted to investigate the potential use of struvite as a fertilizer. Various struvite crystalline fertilizers were evaluated for their fertilizer performance by cultivating potted vegetable crops. The nitrogen removal efficiency of zeolite-seeded struvite was higher than that of no seed struvite. The ammonia nitrogen removal efficiency was more than 99% irrespective of the kind of zeolite. The soil column test revealed that nutrient releasing from liquid fertilizer and zeolite-seeded struvite recovered from livestock wastewater was 11 and 63 days, respectively. Struvite recovered from livestock wastewater contained more than 20% (w/w) potassium oxide; however, the concentration of heavy metals, such as copper and zinc, was very low. Therefore, we considered that the synthesized struvite using livestock wastewater has high value as fertilizer. The recovered struvite was effective under appropriate concentrations to cultivate all the applied vegetable crops in this study.
AuthorsKyung Jin Min, Daegi Kim, Jongkeun Lee, Kwanyong Lee, Ki Young Park
JournalEnvironmental science and pollution research international (Environ Sci Pollut Res Int) Vol. 26 Issue 33 Pg. 34332-34344 (Nov 2019) ISSN: 1614-7499 [Electronic] Germany
PMID31175569 (Publication Type: Journal Article)
Chemical References
  • Fertilizers
  • Metals, Heavy
  • Phosphates
  • Soil
  • Waste Water
  • ammonium phosphate
  • Phosphorus
  • Ammonia
  • Struvite
  • Nitrogen
Topics
  • Ammonia (analysis)
  • Fertilizers (analysis)
  • Metals, Heavy (analysis)
  • Nitrogen (analysis)
  • Nutrients
  • Phosphates (chemistry)
  • Phosphorus
  • Soil
  • Struvite (chemistry)
  • Vegetables (growth & development)
  • Wastewater (chemistry)

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