Precipitation of liquid swine manure phosphates using magnesium smelting by-products

Citation

Parent, G., Bélanger, G., Ziadi, N., Deland, J.P., Laperrière, J. (2007). Precipitation of liquid swine manure phosphates using magnesium smelting by-products. Journal of Environmental Quality, [online] 36(2), 557-567. http://dx.doi.org/10.2134/jeq2006.0174

Abstract

Swine manure contains considerable amounts of total (P) and soluble phosphores (PO4-P) which may increase the soil P content when applied in excess to crop requirements and, consequently, risk water eutrophication. The feasibility of using magnesium (Mg) from the by-product of electrolysis and foundries (BPEF) for the removal of P from liquid swine manure was studied by adding up to 3 g of Mg as BPEF per liter of nursery (NU) and grower-finisher (GF) swine manure in 25-L plastic buckets. Changes in P and other elements were monitored for up to 360 h. Small amounts of Mg as BPEF (0.5 and 1.0 g Mg L -1 manure) reduced the total P concentration of the liquid fraction by 70 to 95% of both manure types with respect to the control treatment of mixed raw manure. A settling period of 8 h or more was necessary to significantly reduce the liquid fraction's total P concentration for both manure types. Reduction of PO4-P varied from 96 to 100% in the liquid fractions for both manure types, which along with natural settling, explains most of the total P reduction in that fraction. The addition of BPEF did not influence the N content of manure. The low P liquid fraction can be safely applied to saturated P soils whereas the high P solid fraction offers the opportunity of transporting manure to agricultural soils deficient in P. Since N is conserved, both liquid and solid fractions could be valuable fertilizer manure by-products. © ASA, CSSA, SSSA.

Publication date

2007-03-01