Phosphorus Removal
Phosphorus adsorption takes place in the soil media below the biozone. The concentration of P in the biozone is often in the linear range of reported nonlinear isotherms (McCray et al., 2005). A linear isotherm is represented by the equation:
S=KDC (15)
where S is the mass of solute sorbed per unit dry weight of solid (mg/kg), C is the concentration of the solute in solution in equilibrium with the mass of solute sorbed onto the solid (mg/L), and KD is a linear distribution coefficient (L/kg). McCray et al. (2005) recommends KD= 15.1 L/kg, the linear sorption isotherm constant as median value, but the value may vary from the 10th percentile (KD= 5 L/kg) to 90th percentile (KD= 128 L/kg) for modeling purpose. Similarly, a median value of Smax= 237 mg/kg is recommended for the maximum P sorption capacity. This value may underestimate the P sorption capacity of the soil in some cases. A larger value (~800mg/kg) can be used (Zanini et al., 1998) when the P sorption capacity is underestimated. The concentration of P in the biozone is often reported low; thus, only the linear portion of a nonlinear isotherm is enough for estimation.
Phosphorus sorption isotherm described in Equation (15) gives an estimate of P sorption capacity given the P concentration and the distribution coefficient. According to this equation, effluent P concentration leaching to sub-soil layer should be zero until the soil is saturated withP; however, small amount of soluble P leaches to sub-soil layer with daily inflow of P to the biozone. The effluent P concentration is estimated by a linear relationship suggested by Bond et al. (2006) in which the outflow P concentration is proportional to the total amount P in the soil layer based on soil type as depicted in Figure 6:4-2.

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