1998
DOI: 10.1029/97wr02942
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Evaluation of chloride and pesticide transport in a fractured clayey till using large undisturbed columns and numerical modeling

Abstract: Abstract. Saturated groundwater flow and tracer experiments using fluorescent dye, chloride, and the herbicides mecoprop and simazine were carried out in the laboratory using three large-diameter (0.5 m) undisturbed columns of fractured clayey till. Hydraulic conductivity of the columns ranged from 10 -s m/s in the shallowest column (1 rn depth) to 10 -7 m/s in the deepest column (4 rn depth) and were similar to field-measured values for these deposits. Results of the tracer experiments are consistent with a c… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
3
1
1

Citation Types

9
85
0
1

Year Published

2001
2001
2018
2018

Publication Types

Select...
9
1

Relationship

1
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 84 publications
(95 citation statements)
references
References 31 publications
9
85
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…Potential remedial actions include: (i) dewatering of the contaminated zone at high pumping rates and removal of the volatile NAPLs through soil vapor extraction (Goldford et al, 1994); (ii) surfactant-enhanced NAPL dissolution and mobilization (Pennell et al, 1994); (iii) in situ bioremediation (Madsen et al, 1993); (iv) steam injection (Keyes et al, 1994). However, the rational design and installation of an appropriate remediation scheme on a contaminated fractured site requires information about the distribution of liquid pollutants throughout the subsurface (Jorgensen et al, 1998). Even though a great deal of work has been focused on the development of very sophisticated numerical codes (Schwartz and Smith, 1988;Jorgensen et al, 1998;Vogel et al, 2000) which forecast the contaminant spreading in fractured reservoirs and are used as tools in risk assessment procedures, there is a lack of fundamental knowledge concerning the¯ow physics in single fractures of complex geometry (Zimmerman and Bodvarsson, 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Potential remedial actions include: (i) dewatering of the contaminated zone at high pumping rates and removal of the volatile NAPLs through soil vapor extraction (Goldford et al, 1994); (ii) surfactant-enhanced NAPL dissolution and mobilization (Pennell et al, 1994); (iii) in situ bioremediation (Madsen et al, 1993); (iv) steam injection (Keyes et al, 1994). However, the rational design and installation of an appropriate remediation scheme on a contaminated fractured site requires information about the distribution of liquid pollutants throughout the subsurface (Jorgensen et al, 1998). Even though a great deal of work has been focused on the development of very sophisticated numerical codes (Schwartz and Smith, 1988;Jorgensen et al, 1998;Vogel et al, 2000) which forecast the contaminant spreading in fractured reservoirs and are used as tools in risk assessment procedures, there is a lack of fundamental knowledge concerning the¯ow physics in single fractures of complex geometry (Zimmerman and Bodvarsson, 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within the NASRI project 7 retardation factors were determined during column experiments (Jekel, 2006, Licht et al, 2005. Referenced values for comparable conditions (sandy aquifer, low sedimentary organic carbon) are used for further 6 parameters (Braids, 2001, Broholm et al, 2001, Buss et al, 2006, Grischek et al, 1997, Heberer and Jekel, 2006, Jørgensen et al 1998, Mersmann et al, 2003, Scheytt et al, 2006, Stuyfzand et al, 2007, Tuxen et al, 2000. Eight retardation values are applied based on similarity considerations regarding the substances' structural characteristics (Table 2).…”
Section: Retardation Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Likely, fracture flow increases pollution vulnerability via an overall reduction in both travel time and natural remediationpotential relative to matrix flow, thereby allowing for comparatively rapid transfer of infiltrating water and pesticides. This proposal is theoretically valid (Freeze and Cherry 1979) and well-established regarding fracture and macropore flow, and associated pollutant transport in e.g., clay tills (Jorgensen et al 1998;Jarvis 2007). However, few studies comparing pesticide pollution in aquifers dominated by matrix flow to those dominated by fracture flow have been able to support such a hypothesis (Neil et al 1989;Barbash and Resek 1996).…”
Section: Discussion Pollution Extent Character and Vulnerabilitymentioning
confidence: 86%