A new low cost technology for recovering phosphorus from liquid swine manure is expected to interest Manitoba farmers facing new phosphorus-based limits on the application of livestock manure fertilizer.
The University of Manitoba’s Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences is participating in a project in which two 500-litre settling tanks are being used to recover magnesium ammonium phosphate, or struvite, from liquid hog manure for use as phosphorus fertilizer.
Ph.D. candidate Joe Ackerman explains phosphorus in its soluble form can combine with magnesium and ammonium to form a crystal that can be used as a slow release fertilizer.
This crystal dissolves slowly.
It’s got ammonia in it as well as phosphate in it and magnesium is not a problem with most soils.
We set up a pilot scale reactor which was basically two 500 litre tanks and that was operated this summer pumping supernatant into it and dosing it and then collecting this precipitate that came out.
That was quite successful.
We were able to remove about 70 percent of total phosphate from the liquid that we ran through.
That’s with the overnight settling.
We’d like to bring that time down.
The product, once it was dried down and analyzed, it came out as about six percent total phosphorus and a little more than six percent total nitrogen and about four percent potassium.
It’s a reasonable fertilizer.
There’s areas we’d like to perfect and develop though and that will be this coming summer.
Ackerman notes only a small portion of the phosphorus in liquid swine manure is in the soluble form but during anaerobic digestion the acidity increases causing more phosphorus to become soluble and available.
He says bench scale studies will evaluate the proportion of phosphorus that can be made soluble under anaerobic digestion.
Source: Farmscape.Ca