Modification, calibration and verification of the IWA River Water Quality Model to simulate a pilot-scale high rate algal pond

We implemented the IWA River Water Quality Model No. 1 (Reichert et al., 2001. River Water Quality Model No. 1, IWA Scientific & Technical Report No. 12) to simulate water-quality characteristics in two pilot-scale High Rate Algal Ponds. Simulation results were compared with two years' of d...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inWater research (Oxford) Vol. 46; no. 9; pp. 2911 - 2926
Main Authors Broekhuizen, Niall, Park, Jason B.K., McBride, Graham B., Craggs, Rupert J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Kidlington Elsevier Ltd 01.06.2012
Elsevier
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Summary:We implemented the IWA River Water Quality Model No. 1 (Reichert et al., 2001. River Water Quality Model No. 1, IWA Scientific & Technical Report No. 12) to simulate water-quality characteristics in two pilot-scale High Rate Algal Ponds. Simulation results were compared with two years' of data from the ponds. The first year's data from one pond were used for model calibration; the remaining data were used for validation. As originally formulated and parameterized, the model consistently yielded summer-time algal biomass concentrations which were too low – with consequent failures in its reproduction of dissolved oxygen, pH and nutrient dynamics. We experimented with various structural/parametric changes to improve the model's performance. The most effective strategy was to greatly increase the respiratory losses suffered by the heterotrophic osmotrophs (thereby giving the algae access to a larger fraction of the incoming dissolved organic carbon and nitrogen). This suggests that CO2-bubbling alone cannot entirely preclude resource-limitation of algal production. We doubt that our parameterization of heterotrophic osmotrophs is correct and infer that the algae derive a large fraction of their nutrition by direct osmotrophic uptake of dissolved organic matter. This inference is supported by the literature concerning the physiology of the dominant algal species in our ponds. [Display omitted] ► We applied the IWA River Water Quality Number 1 to two High Rate Algal Ponds. ► In its original form, the model was unable to reproduce the field data. ► With some structural and parametric changes it reproduced most aspects of the data. ► We infer that algal mixotrophy nutrition is an important process in our ponds. ► A literature search confirmed that the dominant alga (Pediastrum) is mixotrophic.
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ISSN:0043-1354
1879-2448
DOI:10.1016/j.watres.2012.03.011