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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 42:731-737 (1978)
© 1978 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Direct In-field Measurement of Nitrous Oxide Flux from Soils1

J. C. Ryden, L. J. Lund and D. D. Focht2

ABSTRACT

A method was developed whereby nitrous oxide (N2O) effusing from a soil surface could be contained and selectively trapped for subsequent analysis. Containment of N2O was achieved by inserting a steel cover box with inlet and outlet ports into the soil. The enclosed air space above the soil surface was continuously swept by drawing external air through the cover at a flow rate of 20 liters/hour. N2O in the air swept from the enclosed airspace was adsorbed on 5Å molecular sieve. Adsorbed N2O was displaced for gas chromatographic analysis by addition of water to the molecular sieve in a closed system. N2O evolved from the soil surface was distinguished from that drawn into the cover during operation by concurrent measurement of the amount of N2O adsorbed from an equivalent flow of the external atmosphere. The adsorption and recovery of N2O by molecular sieve was affected by the N2O concentration in the air flow and the amount of N2O passed through the molecular sieve. Preliminary experiments in which N2O-air mixtures were passed through 20g molecular sieve demonstrated that for N2O concentrations up to 34 µg N/liter, a flow rate of 20 liters/hour and sampling periods of 4 hours or less, complete recovery of N2O passed into the molecular sieve was achieved upon displacement with water. N2O released into the enclosed air space from an unsealed syringe was also quantitatively recovered providing a flow rate of at least 20 liters/hour was used to sweep the cover box. Flow rates of 10 to 40 liters/hour through covers inserted into moist soil had no effect on the measured rate of N2O evolution from the soil surface. Preliminary measurements at an irrigated, fertilized (120 kg N/ha) celery-production block on a Haploxeroll indicated an overall mean N2O flux of 9.42 g N/ha per hour over a period of 76 hours. There was a diurnal variation in the N2O flux with mean peak fluxes of up to 15.8 g N/ha per hour occuring during the early afternoon. The method provides a basis for monitoring N2O flux from field soils under on-going agricultural practice.


NOTES

1 Contribution from the Dep. of Soil and Environmental Sci., Univ. of Calif., Riverside, CA 92521. Research supported by R.A.N.N. Div. of the Nat. Sci. Found., Project AEN74-11136A01.

2 Research Soil Scientist, and Associate Professors, respectively.

Received for publication October 17, 1977. Accepted for publication June 15, 1978.




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