Environmental science & technology | 2019

Nitrous Oxide and Methane Dynamics in Woodchip Bioreactors: Effects of Water Level Fluctuations on Partitioning into Trapped Gas Phases.

 
 

Abstract


Woodchip bioreactors (WBRs) are low-cost, passive systems for nonpoint source nitrogen removal at terrestrial-aquatic interfaces. The greenhouse gases nitrous oxide (N2O) and methane (CH4) can be produced within WBRs, and efforts to reduce N2O and CH4 emissions from WBR systems require improved understanding of the biogeochemical and physical-chemical mechanisms regulating their production, transport, and release. This study evaluates the impact of trapped gas-filled void volumes as sinks of dissolved gases from water, and as sources of episodic fluxes when water levels fall. Dissolved gas tracer experiments in a laboratory bioreactor were used to parameterize nonequilibrium advection-dispersion-gas transfer models and quantify trapping of gas-filled voids as a function of antecedent hydrological conditions. Experiments following a water level rise revealed that up to 24% of the WBR pore volume was occupied by trapped gas phases, which were primarily located in pore spaces inside woodchips. This finding was confirmed with X-ray computed microtomography. 3.3-10% of N2O and 4.3-14% of CH4 injected into the reactor following a water table rise partitioned into gas-filled voids and were released when water tables fell. In the case of N2O, partitioning into trapped gas phases makes N2O unavailable for enzymatic reduction, potentially enhancing N2O fluxes under fluctuating water levels.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1021/acs.est.9b04829
Language English
Journal Environmental science & technology

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