Abstract

The increased use of nitrogen fertilizers in agriculture would cause migration of nitrogen to surface and groundwater; accordingly, would lead to water resources contamination. The objective of this study is to investigate the effect of potassium zeolite on nitrate and ammonium ions sorption and retention in a saturated sandy loam soil in a laboratory condition. The study was conducted as a completely randomized block design with four treatments of 0, 2, 4 and 8 g zeolite per kilogram soil and three replications. Ammonium nitrate fertilizer with concentration of 10 g l−1 was added to soil columns and then leaching was performed. The results show that increasing potassium zeolite to soil causes reduction to the mobility of both nitrate and ammonium and enhancement of the retention of ions in soil. Ions leaching were simulated with convection–dispersion-equation (CDE) and mobile–immobile model (MIM) using HYDRUS-1D code. The results indicate that ammonium ion sorption by soil followed the Freundlich isotherm model. Absorption isotherms and dispersion (De) coefficient were determined through the inverse modeling for both ions. Based on the results, optimized values of Freundlich isotherm were much less than the observed amounts. This shows that the HYDRUS-1D model underestimated the adsorption parameters to predict the ammonium ion mobility in soil macropores. Since soil has been disturbed, the prediction of CDE model was equal to MIM model approximately. Both models showed that as the amount of applied zeolite increases, the dispersion (De) coefficient of nitrate and ammonium ions in the soil increases.

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