Literature DB >> 31745766

Impact of calcium peroxide dosage on the control of nutrients release from sediment in the anoxic landscape water.

Yi Wang1,2, Wen-Huai Wang3,4, Xin-Xin Lu3,4, Lin-Lin Feng3,4, Fu-Rong Xue3,4, Lu-Qin Sun5.   

Abstract

The anoxic and reductive aquatic environment is formed easily in summer due to the global warming, which may accelerate endogenous release. In this experiment, four different dosages of calcium peroxide (CaO2) were adopted to study the control effects of nutrients release from the sediments in the simulated landscape waters. The results demonstrated that CaO2 addition could effectively improve the physicochemical properties and microbial composition in sediments, and an obvious improvement was achieved with a larger dosage. It was observed that the surface sediments of experiment groups were oxidized to form a capping barrier between the sediment and overlying water, which might cut off the pollutant diffusion in sediment. Meanwhile, CaO2 could decrease the nutrients concentration in water obviously, and the reduced effect was positively correlated with the CaO2 dosage. Compared with the nutrients release fluxes in CK (105.89 mg-TN m-2 day-1, 106.48 mg-NH4+-N m-2 day-1, 4.14 mg-TP m-2 day-1, and 4.30 mg-SRP m-2 day-1), the CaO2 dosages of 0.12 and 0.18 kg m-2 could entirely inhibit the nutrients release from sediment, and partially reduce the original pollutants in the overlying water. However, 0.18 kg m-2 CaO2 would cause a higher increase of pH value and NO2--N concentration, and bring potential risk to the aquatic ecosystem. Therefore, 0.12 kg-CaO2 m-2-sediment was selected as the optimal dosage by considering the control effect, economic cost, and potential risk comprehensively. In general, this study provided a quantitative usage method of CaO2, which is convenient and effective to prevent or control the nutrients release from sediment caused by anoxic and reductive condition in summer.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anoxic/reductive condition; Calcium peroxide; Dosage effect; Microbial transformation; Release flux; Sediment capping barrier

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31745766     DOI: 10.1007/s11356-019-06916-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int        ISSN: 0944-1344            Impact factor:   4.223


  30 in total

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Journal:  Chemosphere       Date:  2018-12-07       Impact factor: 7.086

8.  Controlling eutrophication by combined bloom precipitation and sediment phosphorus inactivation.

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9.  Successful control of internal phosphorus loading after sediment dredging for 6years: A field assessment using high-resolution sampling techniques.

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10.  Electrochemical Induced Calcium Phosphate Precipitation: Importance of Local pH.

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