期刊论文详细信息
WATER RESEARCH 卷:71
Phosphorus losses from agricultural land to natural waters are reduced by immobilization in iron-rich sediments of drainage ditches
Article
Baken, Stijn1  Verbeeck, Mieke1  Verheyen, Dries1  Diels, Jan1  Smolders, Erik1 
[1] Katholieke Univ Leuven, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium
关键词: Phosphorus sorption;    Iron oxyhydroxides;    Iron oxidation;    Phosphorus binding;    Water quality;    Diffusive equilibrium in thin films;   
DOI  :  10.1016/j.watres.2015.01.008
来源: Elsevier
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【 摘 要 】

Redox reactions involving iron (Fe) strongly affect the mobility of phosphorus (P) and its migration from agricultural land to freshwater. We studied the transfer of P from groundwater to open drainage ditches in an area where, due to Fe(II) rich groundwater, the sediments of these ditches contain accumulated Fe oxyhydroxides. The average P concentrations in the groundwater feeding two out of three studied drainage ditches exceeded environmental limits for freshwaters by factors 11 and 16, but after passing through the Ferich sediments, the P concentrations in the ditch water were below these limits. In order to identify the processes which govern Fe and P mobility in these systems, we used diffusive equilibration in thin films (DET) to measure the vertical concentration profiles of P and Fe in the sediment pore water and in the ditchwater. The Fe concentrations in the sediment pore water ranged between 10 and 200 mg L-1 and exceeded those in the inflowing groundwater by approximately one order of magnitude, due to reductive dissolution of Fe oxyhydroxides in the sediment. The dissolved P concentrations only marginally increased between groundwater and sediment pore water. In the poorly mixed ditchwater, the dissolved Fe concentrations decreased towards the water surface due to oxidative precipitation of fresh Fe oxyhydroxides, and the P concentrations decreased more sharply than those of Fe. These observations support the view that the dynamics of Fe and P are governed by reduction reactions in the sediment and by oxidation reactions in the ditchwater. In the sediment, reductive dissolution of P-containing Fe oxyhydroxides causes more efficient solubilization of Fe than of P, likely because P is buffered by adsorption on residual Fe oxyhydroxides. Conversely, in the ditchwater, oxidative precipitation causes more efficient immobilization of P than of Fe, due to ferric phosphate formation. The combination of these processes yields a natural and highly efficient sink for P. It is concluded that, in Fe-rich systems, the fate of P at the sediment-water interface is determined by reduction and oxidation of Fe. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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