Carbon Dosing Increases Nitrate Removal Rates in Denitrifying Bioreactors at Low‐Temperature High‐Flow Conditions

Nitrogen losses from croplands contribute to impairment of water bodies. This laboratory experiment evaluated various C sources for use in a denitrifying bioreactor, a conservation practice designed to reduce N losses. The nitrate removal efficiency of candidate treatments (corn cobs [CC], corn cobs...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of environmental quality 2018-07, Vol.47 (4), p.856-864
Hauptverfasser: Roser, Marta B., Feyereisen, Gary W., Spokas, Kurt A., Mulla, David J., Strock, Jeffrey S., Gutknecht, Jessica
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nitrogen losses from croplands contribute to impairment of water bodies. This laboratory experiment evaluated various C sources for use in a denitrifying bioreactor, a conservation practice designed to reduce N losses. The nitrate removal efficiency of candidate treatments (corn cobs [CC], corn cobs with modified coconut coir [CC+MC], corn cobs with modified coconut coir and modified macadamia shell biochar [CC+MC+MBC], wood chips [WC], wood chips with hardwood biochar [WC+BC], and wood chips with continuous sodium acetate addition [WC+A]) were tested with up‐flow direction. Effluent was sampled after a repeated weekly flow regime with hydraulic residence times of 1.5, 8, 12, and 24 h. Column temperatures were 15°C for 14 wk (warm), 5°C for 13 wk (cold), and again 15°C for 7 wk (rewarm). Cumulative nitrate N load reduction was greatest for WC+A (80, 80, and 97% during the warm, cold, and rewarm runs, respectively). Corn cob treatments (CC, CC+MC, and CC+MC+MBC) had the second greatest cumulative load reductions for all three temperature experiments, and WC and WC+BC had the lowest performance under these conditions. The nitrate removal rate was optimum at the 1.5‐h hydraulic residence time for the WC+A treatment: 43, 30, and 121 g N m−3 d−1 for the warm, cold, and rewarm runs, respectively. Furthermore, acetate addition greatly improved wood chip performance and could be used to enhance nitrate N removal under the cold and high‐flow‐rate conditions of springtime drainage for the north‐central United States. Core Ideas Acetate dosing reduced nitrate load by one‐third at 5°C and
ISSN:0047-2425
1537-2537
DOI:10.2134/jeq2018.02.0082