Publications by authors named "Alejandra Robles-Lecompte"

Nutrient pollution has become an important issue to solve in stormwater runoff due to the fast population growth and urbanization that impacts water quality and triggers harmful algal blooms. There is an acute need to link the dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) decomposition with the coupled nitrification and denitrification pathways to realize the pattern shifts in the nitrogen cycle. This paper presented a lab-scale cascade upflow biofiltration system for comparison of nitrate and phosphate removal from stormwater matrices through two specialty adsorbents at three influent conditions.

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The presence of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) in stormwater treatment processes is a continuous challenge because of the intertwined nature of its decomposition, bioavailability, and biodegradability and its unclear molecular characteristics. In this paper, 21 T Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS) in combination with quantitative polymerase chain reaction was applied to elucidate the molecular change of DON and microbial population dynamics in a field-scale water filtration system filled with two specialty adsorbents for comparison in South Florida where the dry and wet seasons are distinctive annually. The adsorbents included CPS (clay-perlite and sand sorption media) and ZIPGEM (zero-valent iron and perlite-based green environmental media).

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To investigate watershed remediation within a Total Maximum Daily Load program, this study examined the field-scale filtration performance of two specialty absorbents. The goal was to simultaneously remove nutrients and biological pollutants along Canal 23 (C-23) in the St. Lucie River Basin, Florida.

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