Design and testing of a novel hypolimnetic oxygenation system to improve water quality in Lake Bard, California

Debroux, JF; Beutel, MW; Thompson, CM; Mulligan, S

HERO ID

2043681

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2012

HERO ID 2043681
In Press No
Year 2012
Title Design and testing of a novel hypolimnetic oxygenation system to improve water quality in Lake Bard, California
Authors Debroux, JF; Beutel, MW; Thompson, CM; Mulligan, S
Journal Lake and Reservoir Management
Volume 28
Issue 3
Page Numbers 245-254
Abstract Debroux J-F, Beutel MW, Thompson CM, Mulligan S. 2012. Design and testing of a novel hypolimnetic oxygenation system to improve water quality in Lake Bard, California. Lake Reserv Manage. 28:245-254. Hypolimnetic oxygenation, the engineered addition of oxygen gas to the bottom of lakes and reservoirs, can improve water quality by repressing the accumulation of nutrients, metals, and toxic compounds in bottom waters. This study designed and tested an oxygenation system in Lake Bard, California. Hypolimnetic oxygen demand, a key design parameter, was estimated through the combination of sediment-water chamber incubations and numerical analysis of water column dissolved oxygen (DO) profiles. Chamber incubations showed that increased water velocity near the sediment-water interface substantially increased the rate of sediment oxygen uptake, and this observation was incorporated into system sizing. The chamber study also confirmed that maintenance of oxygenated conditions repressed sediment release of phosphate, ammonia, manganese, and sulfide. Phosphorus and manganese release rates were 6-8 mg/m(2)/d and 2-5 mg/m(2)/d under anoxic conditions, respectively, but negligible or negative under oxic conditions. The novel hypolimnetic oxygenation system used a waste product, oxygen-rich off-gas from an ozone contactor at a nearby water treatment plant, to sustainably improve source water quality. The system was tested over a 2 week period in June 2004. Oxygen addition averaged 380 kg/d and increased bottom water DO from 1-2 to 5-6 mg/L with a concurrent drop in water column phosphate and iron, and a delay in sediment release of ammonia. Manganese, with its slow oxidation kinetics, remained in bottom waters during the oxygenation test, indicating that the oxygenation system needs to be turned on earlier in the season to better control manganese accumulation in bottom waters.
Doi 10.1080/07438141.2012.716501
Wosid WOS:000308981900008
Url http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/07438141.2012.716501
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Keyword ammonia; hypolimnetic oxygenation system design; iron; manganese; phosphate; sediment oxygen demand