Combined stripping-struvite precipitation process for treating high ammonia-nitrogen wastewater generated by the craft of vanadium extraction
Abstract
The direct discharge of high ammonia–nitrogen (NH3–N) wastewater generated during vanadium extraction can cause serious pollution of ecosystems. The results of this study indicate that the optimal process conditions are as follows: NH3–N wastewater pretreated by the stripping method in the first stage, with an initial pH of 11, stripping temperature of 40 °C, and gas–liquid ratio of 3600 (L/L); followed by a second stage involving the struvite precipitation method, with a reaction temperature of 25 °C, pH 9.5, n(Mg2+) : n(NH4+) ratio of 1.15, n(PO43−) : n(NH4+) ratio of 1.05, and a precipitation time of 25 min. Under these optimal conditions, the recovery of ammonia–nitrogen in the first stage could reach 90.61% (reduced from 23 941 mg L−1 to 2249 mg L−1). In the second stage, using a response surface methodology, the main influencing factors were optimized, and a high-fitting quadratic response surface model was obtained. This optimization led to an ammonia–nitrogen recovery of 95.5% (reducing the ammonia–nitrogen content from 2249 mg L−1 to 101 mg L−1). The final precipitate analysis showed that struvite (magnesium ammonium phosphate, MAP) crystals were the main component, with higher purity, which could be used as a compound fertilizer. The study showed that the combined process of stripping and struvite precipitation could effectively remove ammonia–nitrogen from high-concentration ammonia–nitrogen wastewater generated during vanadium extraction and that the reaction conditions optimized by response surface methodology ensured good operability and accuracy.