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Featured researches published by Andrew M. O'Reilly.


Science of The Total Environment | 2012

Nutrient removal using biosorption activated media: Preliminary biogeochemical assessment of an innovative stormwater infiltration basin

Andrew M. O'Reilly; Martin P. Wanielista; Ni-Bin Chang; Zhemin Xuan; Willie G. Harris

Soil beneath a stormwater infiltration basin receiving runoff from a 23 ha predominantly residential watershed in north-central Florida, USA, was amended using biosorption activated media (BAM) to study the effectiveness of this technology in reducing inputs of nitrogen and phosphorus to groundwater. The functionalized soil amendment BAM consists of a 1.0:1.9:4.1 mixture (by volume) of tire crumb (to increase sorption capacity), silt and clay (to increase soil moisture retention), and sand (to promote sufficient infiltration), which was applied to develop an innovative stormwater infiltration basin utilizing nutrient reduction and flood control sub-basins. Comparison of nitrate/chloride (NO(3)(-)/Cl(-)) ratios for the shallow groundwater indicates that prior to using BAM, NO(3)(-) concentrations were substantially influenced by nitrification or variations in NO(3)(-) input. In contrast, for the new basin utilizing BAM, NO(3)(-)/Cl(-) ratios indicate minor nitrification and NO(3)(-) losses with the exception of one summer sample that indicated a 45% loss. Biogeochemical indicators (denitrifier activity derived from real-time polymerase chain reaction and variations in major ions, nutrients, dissolved and soil gases, and stable isotopes) suggest that NO(3)(-) losses are primarily attributable to denitrification, whereas dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium is a minor process. Denitrification was likely occurring intermittently in anoxic microsites in the unsaturated zone, which was enhanced by the increased soil moisture within the BAM layer and resultant reductions in surface/subsurface oxygen exchange that produced conditions conducive to increased denitrifier activity. Concentrations of total dissolved phosphorus and orthophosphate (PO(4)(3-)) were reduced by more than 70% in unsaturated zone soil water, with the largest decreases in the BAM layer where sorption was the most likely mechanism for removal. Post-BAM PO(4)(3-)/Cl(-) ratios for shallow groundwater indicate predominantly minor increases and decreases in PO(4)(3-) with the exception of one summer sample that indicated a 50% loss. Differences in nutrient variations between the unsaturated zone and shallow groundwater may be the result of the intensity and duration of nutrient removal processes and mixing ratios with water that had undergone little biogeochemical transformation. Observed nitrogen and phosphorus losses demonstrate the potential, as well as the future research needs to improve performance, of the innovative stormwater infiltration basin using BAM for providing passive, economical, stormwater nutrient-treatment technology to support green infrastructure.


Journal of Contaminant Hydrology | 2012

Cyclic biogeochemical processes and nitrogen fate beneath a subtropical stormwater infiltration basin

Andrew M. O'Reilly; Ni-Bin Chang; Martin P. Wanielista

A stormwater infiltration basin in north-central Florida, USA, was monitored from 2007 through 2008 to identify subsurface biogeochemical processes, with emphasis on N cycling, under the highly variable hydrologic conditions common in humid, subtropical climates. Cyclic variations in biogeochemical processes generally coincided with wet and dry hydrologic conditions. Oxidizing conditions in the subsurface persisted for about one month or less at the beginning of wet periods with dissolved O(2) and NO(3)(-) showing similar temporal patterns. Reducing conditions in the subsurface evolved during prolonged flooding of the basin. At about the same time O(2) and NO(3)(-) reduction concluded, Mn, Fe and SO(4)(2-) reduction began, with the onset of methanogenesis one month later. Reducing conditions persisted up to six months, continuing into subsequent dry periods until the next major oxidizing infiltration event. Evidence of denitrification in shallow groundwater at the site is supported by median NO(3)(-)-N less than 0.016 mg L(-1), excess N(2) up to 3 mg L(-1) progressively enriched in δ(15)N during prolonged basin flooding, and isotopically heavy δ(15)N and δ(18)O of NO(3)(-) (up to 25‰ and 15‰, respectively). Isotopic enrichment of newly infiltrated stormwater suggests denitrification was partially completed within two days. Soil and water chemistry data suggest that a biogeochemically active zone exists in the upper 1.4m of soil, where organic carbon was the likely electron donor supplied by organic matter in soil solids or dissolved in infiltrating stormwater. The cyclic nature of reducing conditions effectively controlled the N cycle, switching N fate beneath the basin from NO(3)(-) leaching to reduction in the shallow saturated zone. Results can inform design of functionalized soil amendments that could replace the native soil in a stormwater infiltration basin and mitigate potential NO(3)(-) leaching to groundwater by replicating the biogeochemical conditions under the observed basin.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2012

Soil property control of biogeochemical processes beneath two subtropical stormwater infiltration basins.

Andrew M. O'Reilly; Martin P. Wanielista; Ni-Bin Chang; Willie G. Harris; Zhemin Xuan

Substantially different biogeochemical processes affecting nitrogen fate and transport were observed beneath two stormwater infiltration basins in north-central Florida. Differences are related to soil textural properties that deeply link hydroclimatic conditions with soil moisture variations in a humid, subtropical climate. During 2008, shallow groundwater beneath the basin with predominantly clayey soils (median, 41% silt+clay) exhibited decreases in dissolved oxygen from 3.8 to 0.1 mg L and decreases in nitrate nitrogen (NO-N) from 2.7 mg L to <0.016 mg L, followed by manganese and iron reduction, sulfate reduction, and methanogenesis. In contrast, beneath the basin with predominantly sandy soils (median, 2% silt+clay), aerobic conditions persisted from 2007 through 2009 (dissolved oxygen, 5.0-7.8 mg L), resulting in NO-N of 1.3 to 3.3 mg L in shallow groundwater. Enrichment of δN and δO of NO combined with water chemistry data indicates denitrification beneath the clayey basin and relatively conservative NO transport beneath the sandy basin. Soil-extractable NO-N was significantly lower and the copper-containing nitrite reductase gene density was significantly higher beneath the clayey basin. Differences in moisture retention capacity between fine- and coarse-textured soils resulted in median volumetric gas-phase contents of 0.04 beneath the clayey basin and 0.19 beneath the sandy basin, inhibiting surface/subsurface oxygen exchange beneath the clayey basin. Results can inform development of soil amendments to maintain elevated moisture content in shallow soils of stormwater infiltration basins, which can be incorporated in improved best management practices to mitigate NO impacts.


World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2007: Restoring Our Natural Habitat | 2007

Use of Alternative Sorption Media for Removing Nutrients Associated with Stormwater BMPs

Ni-Bin Chang; Martin P. Wanielista; Andrew M. O'Reilly

The purpose of the current study is to examine the ability of different sorption media to sorb nitrogen from stormwater contained with various nitrogen fertilizers. Sorption media of interest include but are not limited to tire crumb, sawdust, activated carbon, iron amended resins, orange peel, peat, leaf compost, naturally occurring sands, zeolites, coconut husks, polymers, and soy bean hulls. The study consisted of running both batch and packed bed column tests to determine the sorption capacity, the required sorption equilibration time, and the flow through utilization efficiency of various sorption media under various contact times when exposed to stormwater contaminated with various nitrogen fertilizers. Based on such findings, as a State-wide unified rule for stormwater management is developed there is a need to combine field and laboratory data for designing effective passive in-situ treatment units within stormwater retention/detention ponds for ultimate control of nitrogen impact on groundwater in Florida. This paper presents a general description about the upcoming large-scale study in both laboratory and field campaign. To address the uncertainty a simulation model will be designed to address the reliability of such a passive in-situ treatment system as well.


Scientific Investigations Report | 2018

Hydrogeologic setting, conceptual groundwater flow system, and hydrologic conditions 1995–2010 in Florida and parts of Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina

Jason C. Bellino; Eve L. Kuniansky; Andrew M. O'Reilly; Joann F. Dixon

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Water-Resources Investigations Report | 2002

Hydrogeology and simulated effects of ground-water withdrawals from the Floridan aquifer system in Lake County and in the Ocala National Forest and vicinity, north-central Florida

Leel Knowles; Andrew M. O'Reilly; James C. Adamski


Water-Resources Investigations Report | 1998

Hydrogeology and simulation of the effects of reclaimed-water application in west Orange and southeast Lake counties, Florida

Andrew M. O'Reilly


Scientific Investigations Report | 2004

A method for simulating transient ground-water recharge in deep water-table settings in central Florida by using a simple water-balance/transfer-function model

Andrew M. O'Reilly


Water-Resources Investigations Report | 2002

Hydrogeology and water-quality characteristics of the Lower Floridan aquifer in east-central Florida

Andrew M. O'Reilly; Rick M. Spechler; Brian E. McGurk


Scientific Investigations Report | 2012

Groundwater flow and water budget in the surficial and Floridan aquifer systems in east-central Florida

Nicasio Sepúlveda; Claire Tiedeman; Andrew M. O'Reilly; Jeffery B. Davis; Patrick Burger

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Martin P. Wanielista

University of Central Florida

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Ni-Bin Chang

University of Central Florida

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Paul A. Conrads

United States Geological Survey

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Zhemin Xuan

University of Central Florida

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Edwin A. Roehl

United States Geological Survey

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Eve L. Kuniansky

United States Geological Survey

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Joann F. Dixon

United States Geological Survey

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Matthew D. Petkewich

United States Geological Survey

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Pamela A. Telis

United States Geological Survey

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