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Dissolved Phosphorus Retention of Light-Weight Expanded Shale and Masonry Sand Used in Subsurface Flow Treatment Wetlands
56
Citations
13
References
2003
Year
Surface FlowEngineeringPhosphorus RetentionSoil PropertyLight-weight Expanded ShaleGeoenvironmental EngineeringHydraulic PropertyWater StorageHydrogeologySediment-water InteractionMasonry SandExpanded ShaleSedimentologyWaste ManagementSediment TransportConstructed WetlandEnvironmental EngineeringSoil StructureEnvironmental Remediation
Using surface flow constructed wetlands for long-term phosphorus (P) retention presents a challenge due to the fact that P is stored primarily in the sediments. Subsurface flow wetlands have the potential to greatly increase P retention; however, the substrate needs to have both high hydraulic conductivity and high P sorption capacity. The objective of our study was to assess the P retention capacity of two substrates, masonry sand and lightweight expanded shale. We used sorption/desorption isotherms, flow-through column experiments, and pilot-scale wetlands to quantify P retained from treated municipal wastewater. Langmuir sorption isotherms predicted that the expanded shale has a maximum sorption capacity of 971 mg/kg and the masonry sand 58.8 mg/kg. In column desorption and column flow-through experiments, the masonry sand desorbed P when exposed to dilute P solutions. The expanded shale, however, had very little desorption and phosphorus did not break through the columns during our experiment. In pilot cells, masonry sand retained (mean +/- standard deviation) 45 +/- 62 g P/m2/yr and expanded shale retained 164 +/- 110 g P/m2/yr. We conclude that only the expanded shale would be a suitable substrate for retaining P in a subsurface flow wetland.
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