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UBC Theses and Dissertations
Transport of sorbing solutes in fractured media : a numerical and experimental analysis of dispersion and retardation Wels, Christoph
Abstract
The primary pathways for contaminant transport in lowpermeability fractured rock are likely to be through a network of hydraulically-connected fractures in the rock formation. Sorption of contaminants to the fracture walls may significantly retard their transport. The influence of sorption on solute transport is analyzed using both numerical and laboratory migration experiments. A random walk model is developed to simulate solute transport in a parallel plate fracture, assuming that fast, reversible, and linear sorption occurs in a small zone adjacent to the fracture wall. It is shown that a sorbing solute experiences greater longitudinal spreading than does a conservative solute. The magnitude of this enhanced dispersion reaches a maximum in the range of fluid velocities characteristic of Taylor dispersion. At the network scale, transport is simulated by tracking particles in discrete fracture networks, assuming that within each fracture, retardation varies in proportion to the product of a surface distribution coefficient and the specific surface area of the fracture. The results suggest that retardation at the plume scale is a non-uniform and anisotropic process. Different segments of the plume, or equivalently different breakthrough fractions at a downstream boundary, are retarded to a different degree. The degree to which various breakthrough fractions are retarded varies as a function of the orientation of the mean hydraulic gradient relative to the orientation of the fracture sets. This variation can be described in the form of a retardation ellipse. To test the surface retardation model used in the numerical analyses, the sorbing radionuclides strontium and uranium were injected in smooth-walled fractures in granite and steel, respectively. The retardation of uranium was inversely proportional to fracture aperture, providing qualitative support for the definition of the surface retardation factor. The influence of fracture aperture on the retardation of strontium was much greater than that predicted by the surface retardation factor. Strontium retardation was approximately an order of magnitude greater in a narrow fracture (b=450jim, Ra=45) compared to that in a wide fracture (b=780jim, Ra=3.5) . It is hypothesized that hysteresis in sorption, in conjunction with limited transverse mixing across the fracture, caused the apparent increase in sorption strength with a decrease in fracture aperture.
Item Metadata
Title |
Transport of sorbing solutes in fractured media : a numerical and experimental analysis of dispersion and retardation
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Creator | |
Publisher |
University of British Columbia
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Date Issued |
1995
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Description |
The primary pathways for contaminant transport in lowpermeability
fractured rock are likely to be through a network
of hydraulically-connected fractures in the rock formation.
Sorption of contaminants to the fracture walls may
significantly retard their transport. The influence of
sorption on solute transport is analyzed using both numerical
and laboratory migration experiments. A random walk model is
developed to simulate solute transport in a parallel plate
fracture, assuming that fast, reversible, and linear sorption
occurs in a small zone adjacent to the fracture wall. It is
shown that a sorbing solute experiences greater longitudinal
spreading than does a conservative solute. The magnitude of
this enhanced dispersion reaches a maximum in the range of
fluid velocities characteristic of Taylor dispersion. At the
network scale, transport is simulated by tracking particles in
discrete fracture networks, assuming that within each
fracture, retardation varies in proportion to the product of a
surface distribution coefficient and the specific surface area
of the fracture. The results suggest that retardation at the
plume scale is a non-uniform and anisotropic process.
Different segments of the plume, or equivalently different
breakthrough fractions at a downstream boundary, are retarded
to a different degree. The degree to which various breakthrough fractions are retarded varies as a function of
the orientation of the mean hydraulic gradient relative to the
orientation of the fracture sets. This variation can be
described in the form of a retardation ellipse. To test the
surface retardation model used in the numerical analyses, the
sorbing radionuclides strontium and uranium were injected in
smooth-walled fractures in granite and steel, respectively.
The retardation of uranium was inversely proportional to
fracture aperture, providing qualitative support for the
definition of the surface retardation factor. The influence of
fracture aperture on the retardation of strontium was much
greater than that predicted by the surface retardation factor.
Strontium retardation was approximately an order of magnitude
greater in a narrow fracture (b=450jim, Ra=45) compared to that
in a wide fracture (b=780jim, Ra=3.5) . It is hypothesized that
hysteresis in sorption, in conjunction with limited transverse
mixing across the fracture, caused the apparent increase in
sorption strength with a decrease in fracture aperture.
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Extent |
12374911 bytes
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Genre | |
Type | |
File Format |
application/pdf
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Language |
eng
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Date Available |
2009-04-22
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Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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Rights |
For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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DOI |
10.14288/1.0052914
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URI | |
Degree | |
Program | |
Affiliation | |
Degree Grantor |
University of British Columbia
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Graduation Date |
1995-05
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Campus | |
Scholarly Level |
Graduate
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Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
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Item Media
Item Citations and Data
Rights
For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.