4.7 Article

Reclaiming Phosphate from Waste Solutions with Fe(III)-Polysaccharide Hydrogel Beads for Photo-Controlled-Release Fertilizer

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 67, Issue 44, Pages 12155-12163

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b02860

Keywords

controlled-release fertilizer; Fe(III) photochemistry; photoresponsive hydrogels; photodegradation; phosphate recycling; green chemistry

Funding

  1. Herman Frasch Foundation for Chemical Research in Agricultural Chemistry [811-HF17]
  2. Research and Development program of the Ohio Water Development Authority [6833, 7177]
  3. Harmful Algal Bloom Research Initiative of the Ohio Department of Higher Education by Ohio Sea Grant [R/HAB-17-ODHE]
  4. Ohio Lake Erie Commission [SG 538-2018]

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Photoresponsive hydrogels from polysaccharides and Fe(III) were used as a new system to capture and release PO43- from waste solutions. Uptake of 0.6-1.5 mg of phosphate per gram of hydrogels was determined from 800 ppm phosphate solutions (pH 4.8-9.0). These beads also captured 1.2 mg g(-1) of phosphate from animal waste (raw manure, 727 ppm phosphate, pH 7.6), which accounted for above 80% phosphate uptake. Irradiation of phosphate-loaded hydrogels degraded the gels due to the photochemistry of the Fe(III)-carboxylates, giving controlled phosphate release (similar to 81% after 7 days). No release (<2% after 7 days) was seen in the dark. Kale plant trials showed complete degradation of the hydrogels in similar to 2 weeks under greenhouse conditions. Biomass analysis of kale treated with phosphate-loaded beads compared to controls indicated no signs of toxicity. These results show that Fe(III)-polysaccharide hydrogels were able to reclaim phosphates from waste solutions and can be used as a controlled-release fertilizer.

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