“…It has been found that colloid transport and retention in porous media are generally governed by advection, dispersion, and inactivation, as well as by colloid interactions with various interfaces (Keswick & Gerba, 1980; Schijven & Hassanizadeh, 2000). Based on years of research, it is widely accepted that due to their small size, colloidal suspensions moving through porous media are excluded from pores through which they physically cannot fit (i.e., straining; Bradford & Bettahar, 2005), they have limited diffusivity (James, Wang, & Chrysikopoulos, 2018; Soto‐Gómez, Perez‐Rodriguez, Vazquez Juiz, Lopez‐Periago, & Paradelo Perez, 2019; Yu et al, 2019), and are generally electrostatically repelled from like‐charged porous media surfaces (Johnson, Rasmuson, Pazmino, & Hilpert, 2018; Rasmuson, VanNess, Ron, & Johnson, 2019; VanNess, Rasmuson, Ron, & Johnson, 2019). Because of these features, their transport is both enhanced and impeded in the subsurface, compared to non‐sorbing solutes (Bradford, Šimůnek, Bettahar, van Genuchten, & Yates, 2003; McCarthy & Zachara, 1989; McDowell‐Boyer, Hunt, & Sitar, 1986).…”