Spatial and temporal variations of N2O emission in a vertical flow constructed wetland | Variations spatiale et temporelle d'émission de N20 dans un filtre planté à écoulement vertical
2016
Bollon, J. | Filali, Ahlem | Fayolle, Y. | Molle, Pascal | Mander, U. | Gillot, S.
Gas emissions of Vertical Flow Constructed Wetlands (VFCW) treating raw wastewater have been poorly investigated. One of the main issue measuring gas emissions on such systems is related to their high heterogeneity of flow conditions (surface water distribution, feeding/resting periods etc). It is thus of importance to develop a specific methodology to be able first to determine representative gas emission fluxes and then to decide how filter‘s operation can affect these emissions. This study investigates greenhouse gas emissions from a full-scale VFCW for raw wastewater treatment. The plant designed for 800 population equivalents combines two stages of vertical subsurface flow filters planted with Phragmites. Australis. Gaseous emissions were continuously monitored during three weeks representing an overall feeding/resting period (1/3 weeks). Several automatic closed chambers connected to an infrared analyzer were placed at different strategic positions of the filters and allowed the measurement of tens of gaseous fluxes per day and per position. Dissolved N2O concentration was measured in the inlet and the outlet of each filtration stage using N2O micro-sensors. A combination of on-line sensors for NH4+ and NO3- and 24-h composite samples was used to characterize the process performances of each filtration stage. Finally, O2concentration was regularly measured in the air phase of the porous media in order to evaluate the aerobic conditions of the filters. Ammonium removal was on average of 94% during the monitoring period. The continuous measurement highlighted strong spatial and temporal variability of gaseous fluxes. This latter was observed at different time scales (day, week, feeding/resting cycle) and was linked to: (i) the intermittent feeding of the filters, (ii) oxygen content in the porous media and (iii) environmental conditions such as the ambient temperature. Dissolved N2O flux represented about 20% of the total flux (gas + liquid) which indicates the importance of accounting the dissolved flux in the N2O budget. The two filtration stages exhausted contrasted fluxes of methane and nitrous oxide in relation to carbon load and oxygen availability for carbon removal and nitrification. From a methodological point of view, this study indicates that: (i) continuous monitoring of greenhouse gas fluxes during at least an overall filtration cycle and (ii) appropriate spatial sampling strategy are decisive for a reliable determination of emission factors in VFCWs. The overall N2O emission factor estimated during the monitoring period was of 0.78% of the influent total nitrogen which is 28 times higher than the default IPCC factor (0.023% of the TN load). As N2O emissions were strongly correlated to the oxygen concentration within the porous media, it is suspected that nitrification was the main contributor to N2O production in the VFCW studied.
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