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Jan 22, 2025

Innovative process converts urine into slow-release crystal fertilizer

Posted by in categories: food, innovation

A team of chemists and agriculture specialists has developed a way to transform urea in wastewater, into percarbamide, which can be used as a fertilizer. In their paper published in the journal Nature Catalysis, the group describes their process and how well the resulting product worked in growing edible crops.

Urine is seen as a source of because it is high in nitrogen and other rich compounds that are good for . Many home gardeners know that urine can be used as a fertilizer both for flower and vegetable gardens—the key is to mix it with a lot of water to prevent burning the plants.

Prior efforts to use urine as a source of fertilizer on a larger scale, however, have proven to be unfeasible due to industrial inefficiencies; it is much easier to use standard methods that involve extracting nitrogen from the air. In this new effort, the researchers have developed a way to use human and animal as a fertilizer for growing edible crops.

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