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Oxygen concentration profiles and exchange in sediment cores with circulated overlying water
67
Citations
26
References
1989
Year
Oxygen ConcentrationEngineeringSediment QualityEnvironmental EngineeringSediment-water InteractionOxygen Concentration ProfilesHydromechanicsSediment AnalysisWater QualityCirculated Overlying WaterSediment CoresSediment ProcessOxygen ProfilesSedimentologySediment TransportLimnologyOxygen Penetration DepthSedimentation
SUMMARY. 1. The overlying water of intact sediment cores was constantly stirred with an impeller at a rate sufficient to mix turbulently the water column and maintain the diffusive boundary layer at a determined thickness. The system allowed standardization of water circulation in laboratory sediment core experiments. 2. Both oxygen concentration and oxygen penetration depth in the sediments decreased, the former by 70% and the latter from 4.2 mm to 2.0 mm, when the overlying water was not stirred for 24 h, as measured with oxygen microelectrodes in a lake sediment core. 3. Oxygen profiles measured in sediment cores in the laboratory were similar to those measured in situ when the overlying water was stirred with an impeller at such a rate that a similar thickness of the diffusive boundary layer at the sediment‐water interface developed in the laboratory as that in situ. 4. Sediment oxygen consumption was calculated from: (1) measured oxygen profiles in the diffusive boundary layer and the molecular diffusion coefficient for oxygen in water; (2) the measured oxygen decrease in the top of the sediments and the estimated diffusion coefficient in the sediment; and (3) by oxygen differences in the overlying water after incubation of sediment cores.
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