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Pathways for the Valorization of Animal and Human Waste to Biofuels, Sustainable Materials and Value-Added Chemicals

Okolie, Jude A.; Jimoh, Toheeb; Akande, Olugbenga; Okoye, Patrick U.; Ogbaga, Chukwuma C.; Adeleke, Adekunle A.; Ikubanni, Peter P.; Gulec, Fatih; Nosakhare Amenaghawon, Andrew

Pathways for the Valorization of Animal and Human Waste to Biofuels, Sustainable Materials and Value-Added Chemicals Thumbnail


Authors

Jude A. Okolie

Toheeb Jimoh

Olugbenga Akande

Patrick U. Okoye

Chukwuma C. Ogbaga

Adekunle A. Adeleke

Peter P. Ikubanni

DR FATIH GULEC FATIH.GULEC1@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Assistant Professor in Chemical and Environmental Engineering

Andrew Nosakhare Amenaghawon



Abstract

Human and animal waste, including waste products originating from human or animal digestive systems such as urine, feces, and animal manure, have constituted a nuisance to the environment. Inappropriate disposal and poor sanitation of human and animal waste often cause negative impacts on human health through contamination of the terrestrial environment, soil, and water bodies. Therefore, it is necessary to convert these wastes into useful resources to mitigate their adverse environmental effect. The present study provides an overview and research progress of different thermochemical and biological conversion pathways for the transformation of human- and animal-derived waste into valuable resources. The physicochemical properties of human and animal waste are meticulously discussed as well as nutrient recovery strategies. In addition, a bibliometric analysis is provided to identify the trends in research and knowledge gaps. The results reveal that the U.S.A, China and England are the dominant countries in the research areas related to resource recovery from human or animal waste. In addition, researchers from the University of Illinois, the University of California Davis, the Chinese Academy of Science and Zhejiang University are front runners in research related to these areas. Future research should be centred on developing technologies for the on-site recovery of resources, exploring integrated resource recovery pathways, and exploring different safe waste processing methods.

Citation

Okolie, J. A., Jimoh, T., Akande, O., Okoye, P. U., Ogbaga, C. C., Adeleke, A. A., …Nosakhare Amenaghawon, A. Pathways for the Valorization of Animal and Human Waste to Biofuels, Sustainable Materials and Value-Added Chemicals

Working Paper Type Working Paper
Deposit Date May 2, 2024
Publicly Available Date May 9, 2024
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/26261747
Publisher URL https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202302.0256/v1