Rhamnolipid Transport in Biochar-Amended Agricultural Soil
2015
Vu, Kien Anh | Tawfiq, Kamal | Chen, Gang
Rhamnolipid is a biosurfactant produced by several Pseudomonas species, and can wet hydrophobic soils by lowering the cohesive and/or adhesive surface tension. Because of its biodegradability, rhamnolipid is believed to have minimal adverse impact on the soil and groundwater after usage. Applications of rhamnolipid to improve irrigation in agricultural soils thus have obvious advantages over other chemical wetting agents, especially under drought conditions. Due to global warming, soil amendment with biochar has been commonly practiced in agricultural soils to increase the soil water-holding capacity. As such, rhamnolipid transport in biochar-amended agricultural soils needs to be characterized. In this research, we found that rhamnolipid transport in biochar-amended agricultural soils was hindered by retardation (equilibrium adsorption) and deposition (kinetic adsorption), which was well represented by the advection-dispersion equation based on a local equilibrium assumption. A linear equilibrium adsorption was assumed in the advection-dispersion equation simulation, which was proved to be acceptable by studying the breakthrough curves. Both rhamnolipid equilibrium adsorption and kinetic adsorption increased with the increase of the biochar content in the agricultural soil.
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