Effects of Vegetation and Saturated Zone in Cascaded Bioretention on Enhancing Nutrient Removal

Osman, M. and Takaijudin, H. and Massoudieh, A. and Goh, H.W. (2023) Effects of Vegetation and Saturated Zone in Cascaded Bioretention on Enhancing Nutrient Removal. Environmental Engineering Research, 28 (3).

Full text not available from this repository.
Official URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2....

Abstract

Bioretention is a water management practice that is increasingly being applied for runoff quality control. Although previous Bioretention studies have used some techniques to improve nutrient removal, some nutrients still leach out. Therefore, this study used Cascaded Bioretention (CB) by connecting three Bioretention columns in series. The planted Bioretention Column was retrofitted by adding a subsurface drainage module (SDM) below the gravel layer to create a dual saturated zone. This study aimed to investigate the effect of the number of treatments, vegetation, and modified saturated zone on enhancing nutrient removal from agricultural runoff and to understand nutrient removal mechanisms. The removal efficiencies of NH3-N, NO3-N, NO2-N, and TN improved to 89.8, 49.7, 49.2, and 53.4, respectively. The only negative removal was ON, which significantly decreased by incorporating vegetation and a modified saturated zone. Increasing the number of treatments significantly enhanced TN and ON while maintaining stable removal for other nitrogen compounds. However, phosphorus was less sensitive to increasing the number of treatments. Nitrogen removal could be enhanced by different removal processes such as nitrification, denitrification, mineralization, assimilation by plant uptake, and Anammox. However, phosphorus removal was less complicated, as adsorption and infiltration are likely to be the main removal mechanisms. © 2023 Korean Society of Environmental Engineers.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: cited By 3
Uncontrolled Keywords: Agricultural pollution; Agricultural runoff; Ammonia; Groundwater flow; Nitrogen removal; Nutrients; Phosphorus; Wastewater treatment, Bioretention; Cascaded bioretention; Management practises; Nutrient removal; Removal mechanism; Runoff quality; Saturated zone; Treatment; Vegetation zone; Waters managements, Vegetation
Depositing User: Mr Ahmad Suhairi UTP
Date Deposited: 04 Jun 2024 14:10
Last Modified: 04 Jun 2024 14:10
URI: https://khub.utp.edu.my/scholars/id/eprint/18487

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item