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Pathways and efficiency of nitrogen attenuation in wastewater effluent through soil aquifer treatment

Authors :
0000-0002-8639-8229
0000-0002-4009-5476
0000-0003-3331-4076
Abu, Alex
Carrey, Raúl
Valhondo, Cristina
Domènech, Cristina
Soler, Albert
Martínez-Landa, Lurdes
Díaz-Cruz, M. Silvia
Carrera, Jesús
Otero, Neus
0000-0002-8639-8229
0000-0002-4009-5476
0000-0003-3331-4076
Abu, Alex
Carrey, Raúl
Valhondo, Cristina
Domènech, Cristina
Soler, Albert
Martínez-Landa, Lurdes
Díaz-Cruz, M. Silvia
Carrera, Jesús
Otero, Neus
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Soil Aquifer Treatment (SAT) is used to increase groundwater resources and enhance the water quality of wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluents. The resulting water quality needs to be assessed. In this study, we investigate attenuation pathways of nitrogen (N) compounds (predominantly NH4+) from a secondary treatment effluent in pilot SAT systems: both a conventional one (SAT-Control system) and one operating with a permeable reactive barrier (PRB) to provide extra dissolved organic carbon to the recharged water. The goal is to evaluate the effectiveness of the two systems regarding N compounds by means of chemical and isotopic tools. Water chemistry (NO3-, NH4+, Non-Purgeable Dissolved Organic Carbon (NPDOC), and O2) and isotopic composition of NO3- (ẟ15N-NO3- and ẟ18O-NO3-) and NH4+ (ẟ15N-NH4+) were monitored in the inflow and at three different sections and depths along the aquifer flow path. Chemical and isotopic results suggest that coupled nitrification-denitrification were the principal mechanisms responsible for the migration and distribution of inorganic N in the systems and that nitrification rate decreased with depth. At the end of the study period, 66% of the total N in the solution was removed in the SAT-PRB system and 69% in the SAT-Control system, measured at the outlet of the systems. The residual N in solution in the SAT-PRB system had an approximately equal proportion of N-NH4+ and N-NO3- while in the SAT-Control system, the residual N in solution was primarily N-NO3-. Isotopic data also confirmed complete NO3- degradation in the systems from July to September with the possibility of mixing newly generated NO3- with the residual NO3- in the substrate pool.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1348916655
Document Type :
Electronic Resource