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النتائج 1 - 10 من 43
Anthropogenic nitrate attenuation versus nitrous oxide release from a woodchip bioreactor
2022
White, Shane A. | Morris, Shaun A. | Wadnerkar, Praktan D. | Woodrow, Rebecca L. | Tucker, James P. | Holloway, Ceylena J. | Conrad, Stephen R. | Sanders, Christian J. | Hessey, Samantha | Santos, Isaac R.
Nitrogen loss via overland flow from agricultural land use is a global threat to waterways. On-farm denitrifying woodchip bioreactors can mitigate NO₃⁻ exports by increasing denitrification capacity. However, denitrification in sub-optimal conditions releases the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N₂O), swapping the pollution from aquatic to atmospheric reservoirs. Here, we assess NO₃⁻-N removal and N₂O emissions from a new edge-of-field surface-flow bioreactor during ten rain events on intensive farming land. Nitrate removal rates (NRR) varied between 5.4 and 76.2 g NO₃⁻-N m⁻³ wetted woodchip d⁻¹ with a mean of 30.3 ± 7.3 g NO₃⁻-N m⁻³. The nitrate removal efficiency (NRE) was ∼73% in ideal hydrological conditions and ∼18% in non-ideal conditions. The fraction of NO₃⁻-N converted to N₂O (rN₂O) in the bioreactor was ∼3.3 fold lower than the expected 0.75% IPCC emission factor. We update the global bioreactor estimated Q₁₀ (NRR increase every 10 °C) from a recent meta-analysis with previously unavailable data to >20 °C, yielding a new global Q₁₀ factor of 3.1. Mean N₂O CO₂-eq emissions (431.9 ± 125.4 g CO₂-eq emissions day⁻¹) indicate that the bioreactor was not significantly swapping aquatic NO₃⁻ for N₂O pollution. Our estimated NO₃⁻-N removal from the bioreactor (9.9 kg NO₃⁻-N ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹) costs US$13.14 per kg NO₃⁻-N removed and represents ∼30% NO₃⁻-N removal when incorporating all flow and overflow events. Overall, edge-of-field surface-flow bioreactors seem to be a cost-effective solution to reduce NO₃⁻-N runoff with minor pollution swapping to N₂O.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Correlations and adsorption mechanisms of aromatic compounds on biochars produced from various biomass at 700 °C
2018
Yang, Kun | Jiang, Yuan | Yang, Jingjing | Lin, Daohui
Knowledge of adsorption behavior of organic contaminants on high heat temperature treated biochars is essential for application of biochars as adsorbents in wastewater treatment and soil remediation. In this study, isotherms of 25 aromatic compounds adsorption on biochars pyrolyzed at 700 °C from biomass including wood chips, rice straw, bamboo chips, cellulose, lignin and chitin were investigated to establish correlations between adsorption behavior and physicochemical properties of biochars. Isotherms were well fitted by Polanyi theory-based Dubinin-Ashtakhov (DA) model with three parameters, i.e., adsorption capacity (Q⁰) and adsorption affinity (E and b). Besides the negative correlation of Q⁰ with molecular maximum cross-sectional areas (σ) of organic compounds, positive correlations of Q⁰ with total pore volume (Vₜₒₜₐₗ) and average diameter of micropore (D) of biochars were observed, indicating that adsorption by biochars is captured by the pore-filling mechanism with molecular sieving effect in biochar pores. Linear solvation energy relationships (LSERs) of adsorption affinity (E) with solvatochromic parameters of organic compounds (i. e., αₘ and π∗) were established, suggesting that hydrophobic effect, π-π interaction and hydrogen-bonding interaction are the main forces responsible for adsorption. The regression coefficient (π₁) and intercept (C) of obtained LSERs are correlated with biochar H/C and Rₘᵢcᵣₒ, respectively, implying that biochars with higher aromaticity and more micropores have stronger π-π bonding potential and hydrophobic effect potential with aromatic molecule, respectively. However, hydrogen-bonding potential of biochars for organic molecules is not changed significantly with properties of biochars. A negative correlation of b with biochar H/C is also obtained. These correlations could be used to predict the adsorption behavior of organic compounds on high heat temperature treated biochars from various biomass for the application of biochars as sorbents and for the estimating of environmental risks of organic compounds in the present of biochars.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Transport and retention of biochar nanoparticles in a paddy soil under environmentally-relevant solution chemistry conditions
2017
Chen, Ming | Wang, Dengjun | Yang, Fan | Xu, Xiaoyun | Xu, Nan | Cao, Xinde
Land application of biochar has been increasingly recommended as a powerful strategy for carbon sequestration and soil remediation. However, the biochar particles, especially those in the nanoscale range, may migrate or carry the inherent contaminants along the soil profile, posing a potential risk to the groundwater. This study investigated the transport and retention of wood chip-derived biochar nanoparticles (NPs) in water-saturated columns packed with a paddy soil. The environmentally-relevant soil solution chemistry including ionic strength (0.10–50 mM), electrolyte type (NaCl and CaCl2), and natural organic matter (0–10 mg L−1 humic acid) were tested to elucidate their effects on the biochar NPs transport. Higher mobility of biochar NPs was observed in the soil at lower ionic strengths, with CaCl2 electrolyte being more effective than NaCl in decreasing biochar NPs transport. The retained biochar NPs in NaCl was re-entrained (∼57.7%) upon lowering transient pore-water ionic strength, indicating that biochar NPs were reversibly retained in the secondary minimum. In contrast, negligible re-entrainment of biochar NPs occurred in CaCl2 due to the primary minimum and/or particle aggregation. Humic acid increased the mobility of biochar NPs, likely due to enhanced electrosteric repulsive interactions. The transport behaviors of biochar NPs can be well interpreted by a two-site kinetic retention model that assumes reversible retention for one site, and irreversible retention for the other site. Our findings indicated that the transport of wood chip biochar NPs is significant in the paddy soil, highlighting the importance of understanding the mobility of biochar NPs in natural soils for accurately assessing their environmental impacts.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Organic amendments for risk mitigation of organochlorine pesticide residues in old orchard soils
2016
Centofanti, Tiziana | McConnell, Laura L. | Chaney, Rufus L. | Beyer, W Nelson | Andrade, Natasha A. | Hapeman, Cathleen J. | Torrents, Alba | Nguyẽ̂n, Anh | Anderson, Marya O. | Novak, Jeffrey M. | Jackson, Leigh Dana
Performance of compost and biochar amendments for in situ risk mitigation of aged DDT, DDE and dieldrin residues in an old orchard soil was examined. The change in bioavailability of pesticide residues to Lumbricus terrestris L. relative to the unamended control soil was assessed using 4-L soil microcosms with and without plant cover in a 48-day experiment. The use of aged dairy manure compost and biosolids compost was found to be effective, especially in the planted treatments, at lowering the bioavailability factor (BAF) by 18–39%; however, BAF results for DDT in the unplanted soil treatments were unaffected or increased. The pine chip biochar utilized in this experiment was ineffective at lower the BAF of pesticides in the soil. The US EPA Soil Screening Level approach was used with our measured values. Addition of 10% of the aged dairy manure compost reduced the average hazard quotient values to below 1.0 for DDT + DDE and dieldrin. Results indicate this sustainable approach is appropriate to minimize risks to wildlife in areas of marginal organochlorine pesticide contamination. Application of this remediation approach has potential for use internationally in areas where historical pesticide contamination of soils remains a threat to wildlife populations.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Removing mercury from aqueous solution using sulfurized biochar and associated mechanisms
2019
Park, Jong Hwan | Wang, Jim J. | Zhou, Baoyue | Mikhael, Joseph E.R. | DeLaune, R. D.
Biochar has been used to remove heavy metals from aqueous solutions. In this study, a sulfurized wood biochar (SWB) by direct impregnation with elemental sulfur was produced and evaluated along with pristine wood biochar (WB) for adsorption characteristics and mechanism of mercury. Mercury adsorption by WB and SWB was well described by Langmuir model and pseudo second order model and the maximum adsorption capacities of WB and SWB were 57.8 and 107.5 mg g⁻¹, respectively. Intraparticle diffusion model showed that mercury adsorption was fast due to boundary layer and slow adsorption due to diffusion into biochar pores. Although, mercury adsorption by both WB and SWB was predominantly influenced by the pH, temperature, salt concentration, and biochar dosage, the SWB showed a relatively stable mercury adsorption compared to WB under different conditions, suggesting the strong affinity of SWB for mercury. The XPS analysis showed different adsorption mechanisms of mercury between WB and SWB. In particular, mercury adsorption in WB was due to Hg-Cπ bond formation and interaction with carboxyl and hydroxyl groups, whereas in SWB it is primarily due to mercury interaction with C-SOₓ-C and thiophenic groups in addition to Hg-Cπ bond formation and interaction with carboxyl groups. The SEM-EDS mapping also demonstrated that mercury in SWB was related to carbon, oxygen and sulfur. Overall, the sulfurized biochar was effective for removing mercury from aqueous solution, and its direct production through pyrolysis with elemental sulfur impregnation of wood chips could make it an economic option as absorbent for treating mercury-rich wastewater.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Effects of mercury addition on microbial community composition and nitrate removal inside permeable reactive barriers
2018
Hiller-Bittrolff, Kenly | Foreman, Kenneth | Bulseco-McKim, Ashley N. | Benoit, Janina | Bowen, Jennifer L.
Permeable reactive barriers (PRBs) remove nitrogen from groundwater by enhancing microbial denitrification. The PRBs consist of woodchips that provide carbon for denitrifiers, but these woodchips also support other anaerobic microbes, including sulfate-reducing bacteria. Some of these anaerobes have the ability to methylate inorganic mercury present in groundwater. Methylmercury is hazardous to human health, so it is essential to understand whether PRBs promote mercury methylation. We examined microbial communities and geochemistry in fresh water and sulfate-enriched PRB flow-through columns by spiking replicates of both treatments with mercuric chloride. We hypothesized that mercury addition could alter bacterial community composition to favor higher abundances of genera containing known methylating taxa and that the sulfate-rich columns would produce more methylmercury after mercury addition, due mainly to an increase in abundance of sulfate reducing bacteria (SRB). However, methylmercury output at the end of the experiment was not different from output at the beginning, due in part to coupled Hg methylation and demethylation. There was a transient reduction in nitrate removal after mercury addition in the sulfate enriched columns, but nitrate removal returned to initial rates after two weeks, demonstrating resilience of the denitrifying community. Since methylmercury output did not increase and nitrate removal was not permanently affected, PRBs could be a low cost approach to combat eutrophication.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Enhanced dissipation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the presence of fresh plant residues and their extracts
2012
Chen, Baoliang | Yuan, Miaoxin
The feasibility of using fresh plant residues and their extracts to stimulate the bio-dissipation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) were highlighted. Wood chip, bamboo leave, orange peel and their water-extractable organic matter (WEOM) were chosen as amendment materials. Effect of WEOM on bio-dissipation (bioaccumulation and biodegradation) of phenanthrene and pyrene from water by two bacteria were investigated. Orange peel extract demonstrated the highest efficiency for stimulating PAHs removal by bacterium B1 (Pseudomonas putida), while bamboo leave extract was the best one to enhance PAHs bio-dissipation by bacterium B2 (unidentified bacterium isolated from PAHs-contaminated soil). Amended the actual contaminated soil with 1% plant residues, PAHs dissipation were increased by 15–20%, 20–39%, 14–24%, 12–23% and 17–26%, respectively, for 2-, 3-, 4-, 5- and 6-ring PAHs via stimulating indigenous microbial degradation activity. Bamboo leave exhibited the most effective one to stimulate dissipation of PAHs in contaminated soil.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Effects of combustion condition and biomass type on the light absorption of fine organic aerosols from fresh biomass burning emissions over Korea
2020
Park, Seungshik | Yu, Geun-Hye | Bae, Min-Suk
In this study, the light absorption properties of fine organic aerosols from the burning emissions of four biomass materials were examined using UV-spectrophotometry and Aethalometer-measurements, respectively. For wood chips and palm trees, the burning experiments were carried out with different combustion temperatures (200, 250, and 300 οC) in an adjustable, electrically heated combustor. The light absorptions of water and methanol extracts of aerosols, and smoke particles showed strong spectral dependence on the burning emissions of all biomass materials. However, the burning aerosols of wood chips showed stronger absorption than those of the other biomass burning (BB) emissions. For the burning aerosols of wood chips and palm trees, organic carbon/elemental carbon (OC/EC) decreased as the combustion temperature increased from 200 to 300 °C. Absorption Ångström exponent (AAE) values tended to decrease when combustion temperature increased for smoke aerosols and methanol extracts in smoke samples. The mass absorption efficiency at 365 nm (MAE₃₆₅, m² g⁻¹∙C⁻¹) of water- and methanol-extractable OC fractions was highest in wood chip burning smoke samples. MAE₃₆₅ values of methanol extracts for rice straw, pine needles, wood chips, and palm trees burning emission samples were 1.35, 0.92, 2.36–3.37, and 0.86–1.42, respectively. For wood chip and palm tree burning emissions, AAE₃₂₀–₄₃₀ₙₘ values of methanol extracts were strongly correlated with OC/EC (i.e., combustion temperature) with slopes of 0.11 (p < 0.001) and 0.02 (p < 0.001), and R² values of 0.87 and 0.74, respectively. Moreover, a linear regression between MAE₃₆₅ of methanol extractable OC and OC/EC showed slopes of −0.05 (p < 0.001) and −0.004 (p < 0.001) and R² of 0.72 and 0.74, respectively. The results of this study clearly demonstrate that burning condition and biomass type influence the light absorption properties of organic aerosols from BB emissions.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Potential use of biomass and coal-fine waste for making briquette for sustainable energy and environment
2021
Balraj, Ambedkar | Krishnan, Jagannathan | Selvarajan, Keerthana | Sukumar, Keertthana
Biomass waste contributes 14% of the total global energy. And 15–20% of the coal-fine waste from coal mines are deposited in the rivers, ponds, etc., unused, which leads to resource wastage and environmental pollution. The present study aims utilizing biomass and coal-fine waste for producing biomass-coal briquettes without using a binding material. Three different average sizes 50, 134.3, and 199.7 μm of biomass mixture (bagasse, groundnut shell, and woodchips) and coal-fines were used to make different ratios of biomass and coal mixture briquettes. Then, it is subjected to proximate, scanning electron microscope/elemental (SEM/EDX) and thermo-gravimetric analysis (TGA) to understand its property. Proximate analysis results revealed that the biomass waste has the low ash, sensible fixed carbon, and high volatile matter content. A briquette of biomass: coal = 7:1 ratio 50-μm particle size case was chosen for SEM/EDX and TGA analysis since it holds reasonable fixed carbon value comparatively. SEM analysis revealed irregular surfaces, cracks, cavities and longitudinal cracks, veins distribution all around, ups and shallows on the surface and it is the most favorable condition for fuel combustion since oxidant reaches the core of the fuel with less resistant. TGA reconfirms the spontaneous burning characteristics of the entire volatiles and fixed carbon. EDX analysis shows that the carbon and potassium are the two major elements present in the tested briquettes.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Efficient water treatment achieved in recirculating aquaculture system using woodchip denitrification and slow sand filtration
2021
Lindholm-Lehto, Petra Camilla | Pulkkinen, Jani Tapio | Kiuru, Tapio | Koskela, Juha | Vielma, Jouni
For a recirculating aquaculture system (RAS), a passive water treatment system was designed for efficient discharge nutrient removal and water reuse in RAS production. Denitrification in a woodchip bioreactor filled with birch wood (Betula pendula) followed by sand filtration was introduced into a side-loop of an experimental RAS rearing rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Denitrification efficiency remained high (96%) throughout the experiment and reached a nitrogen removal rate of 15 g NO₃-N m⁻³ per day. Sand filtration was used to remove dissolved and particulate matter and improve water quality before being returned to water circulation. To ensure the absence of harmful substances in the system, heavy metals were quantified. Additionally, off-flavor-inducing compounds were quantified in the circulating water and in fish flesh. Significantly higher concentrations of geosmin (GSM) (p<0.05) were observed in the controls compared to side-looped systems, but a similar effect was not observed in the case of 2-methylisoborneol (MIB). Among heavy metals, concentrations of Co (30 μg L⁻¹), Ni (40 μg L⁻¹), and Pb (140 μg L⁻¹) decreased to below 10 μg L⁻¹ in the side-loop water after the start-up of the system. Only low concentrations of Cu (5–30 μg L⁻¹) were found in the rearing tank water, in both the side-loop and controls. The results indicated that this type of process design is suitable for safely producing fish of high quality.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]