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Articles

Transport of ammonium and nitrate in saturated porous media incorporating physiobiotransformations and bioclogging

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Pages 117-132 | Published online: 22 Mar 2016
 

ABSTRACT

The vertical transport of nitrates from fertilizer application and wastewater irrigation through the subsurface and saturated zone is of major concern to assess the vulnerability of groundwater contamination. The present study addresses the transport of nitrogenous fertilizers such as ammonium and nitrate in the presence of organic carbon (acetate) in a one-dimensional soil column under saturated conditions, considering the effect of adsorption and biotransformation. The soil had a neutral pH range and was classified as loamy sand, with a 0.89% organic carbon content. Batch studies revealed that sorption occurred in the order of ammonium > acetate > nitrate following a Freundlich isotherm model. Mixed heterotrophic native soil bacteria for aerobic nitrification and anoxic denitrification were developed, and the growth kinetic parameters were simulated using a Haldane inhibition model for nitrification and a Monod inhibition model for denitrification. Results from biotransformation studies suggested that denitrification was the predominant process, with significant bacterial growth and clogging of pores occurring monotonously reaching a stationary phase by 12 days. Pore-clogging phenomenon not only reduces the permeability of the soil by 5 orders of magnitude but also increases the contact time of the contaminant with the soil microbe and thereby delays the transport process and decreases the effluent ammonium and nitrate concentrations. A tailing breakthrough in a leaching study illustrates that water flux variation (0.153 and 0.509 cm/min) did not influence the transport of solutes, rather irreversible chemical bonding retains more ammonium than nitrate in the soil matrix.

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