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Modelling water and nutrient dynamics in soil-crop systems: Proceedings of the workshop on"Modelling water and nutrient dynamics in soil-crop systems" held on 14-16 June 2004 in Müncheberg, Germany

Kurt Christian Kersebaum ; Jens-Martin Hecker ; Wilfried Mirschel ; Martin Wegehenkel (eds.)

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Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2007 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-4020-4478-6

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4020-4479-3

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer 2007

Tabla de contenidos

Modelling nitrogen dynamics in soil–crop systems with HERMES

Kurt Christian Kersebaum

Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.

Pp. 147-160

Calibration and validation of CERES model for simulating

Ajeet Singh Nain; Kurt Christian Kersebaum

Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.

Pp. 161-181

The impact of crop growth model choice on the simulated water and nitrogen balances

Eckart Priesack; Sebastian Gayler; Hans P. Hartmann

Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.

Pp. 183-195

Simulating trends in crop yield and soil carbon in a long-term experiment – effects of rising CO, N deposition and improved cultivation

Jørgen Berntsen; Bjørn Molt Petersen; Jørgen E. Olesen

Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.

Pp. 197-207

Comparison of methods for the estimation of inert carbon suitable for initialisation of the CANDY model

Martina Puhlmann; Katrin Kuka; Uwe Franko

Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.

Pp. 209-218

Müncheberg field trial data set for agro-ecosystem model validation

Wilfried Mirschel; Karl-Otto Wenkel; Martin Wegehenkel; Kurt Christian Kersebaum; Uwe Schindler; Jens-Martin Hecker

Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.

Pp. 219-243

Dynamics of water, carbon and nitrogen in an agricultural used Chernozem soil in Central Germany

Uwe Franko; Martina Puhlmann; Katrin Kuka; Frank Böhme; Ines Merbach

Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.

Pp. 245-258

The lysimeter station at Berlin-Dahlem

Heiko Diestel; Thomas Zenker; Reinhild Schwartengraeber; Marco Schmidt

Textile dyeing effluents containing recalcitrant dyes are polluting waters due to their color and by the formation of toxic or carcinogenic intermediates such as aromatic amines from azo dyes. Since conventional treatment systems based on chemical or physical methods are quite expensive and consume high amounts of chemicals and energy, alternative biotechnologies for this purpose have recently been studied. A number of anaerobic and aerobic processes have been developed at laboratory scale to treat dyestuff. Some industrial pilot scale plants have even been set up. Additionally, biosorption shows very promising results for decolorizing textile effluents. In this contribution, we review fundamental and applied aspects of biological treatment of textile dyes.

Pp. 259-266