Dispersion and Diffusion

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Dispersion during groundwater flow results in spreading of a contaminant plume from highly concentrated areas to less concentrated areas. In many groundwater transport models, solute transport is described by the advection-dispersion-reaction equation. The dispersion coefficient in this equation is the sum of the molecular diffusion coefficient, mechanical dispersion coefficient and macrodispersion coefficient.

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CONTRIBUTOR(S): Dr. Charles Newell, P.E.


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Molecular Diffusion

Molecular diffusion is the process where the thermal motion of individual molecules causes a flux of dissolved solutes from areas of higher concentration (i.e., chemical activity) to areas of lower concentration (Fig. 1). The diffusion coefficient is a proportionality constant between the molar flux due to molecular diffusion and the concentration gradient and is a function of the temperature and molecular weight. In locations where advective flux is low (clayey aquitards and sedimentary rock), diffusion is often the dominant transport mechanism.

Figure 1. Conceptual depicture of diffusion of dissolved chemicals recently place in a container at Time 1 (left panel) and then distributed throughout the container (right panel) at Time 2.

Mechanical Dispersion

Mechanical dispersion (hydrodynamic dispersion) results from groundwater moving at rates both greater and less than the average linear velocity. This is due to: 1) fluids moving faster through the center of the pores than along the edges, 2) fluids traveling shorter pathways and/or splitting or branching to the sides, and 3) fluids traveling faster through larger pores than through smaller pores[2]. Because the invading solute-containing water does not travel at the same velocity everywhere, mixing occurs along flow paths. This mixing is called mechanical dispersion and results in distribution of the solute at the advancing edge of flow. The mixing that occurs in the direction of flow is called longitudinal dispersion. Spreading normal to the direction of flow from splitting and branching out to the sides is called transverse dispersion (Fig. 2).

Figure 2. Conceptual depiction of mechanical dispersion (adapted from ITRC (2011)[3]).

Macrodispersion

Macrodispersion is the name given to the plume spreading caused by large-scale heterogeneities and associated spatial variations in advective transport velocity. In some groundwater modeling projects, large values of the macrodispersion coefficient are used as an adjustment factor to help match the apparent large-scale spreading of the plume[3]. However, there is limited theoretical support for using large mechanical dispersion coefficients[1][4]. In transmissive zones, macrodispersion coefficients are often orders of magnitude greater than molecular diffusion coefficients, leading some to conclude that molecular diffusion can be ignored.

Recently, an alternate conceptual model for describing large-scale plume spreading has been proposed[1][3][4]. In this approach, solute transport in the transmissive zones is reasonably well described by the advection-dispersion equation using relatively small dispersion coefficients representing mechanical dispersion. However, overtime, molecular diffusion slowly transports solutes into lower permeability zones (Fig. 3). As the transmissive zones are remediated, these solutes slowly diffuse back out, causing a long extended tail to the flushout curve.


Figure 3. Diffusion mechanism leading to plume attenuation and persistence. This process is controlled by diffusion and the presence of geologic heterogeneity with sharp contrasts between transmissive and low permeability media[5].

Impacts on Breakthrough Curves

The impacts of matrix diffusion on the initial breakthrough of the solute plume and later cleanup can be visualized (Fig. 4)[3]. Using a traditional advection-dispersion model, the breakthrough curve for a pulse tracer injection appears as a bell-shaped ( Gaussian) curve (gray line on the right side of the upper graph; Fig. 4)) where the peak arrival time corresponds to the average groundwater velocity. Using an advection-diffusion approach, the breakthrough curve for a pulse injection is asymmetric (solid black line) with the peak tracer concentration arriving earlier than would be expected based on the average groundwater velocity, but with a long extended tail to the flushout curve.

The lower graph of Figure 4 shows the predicted cleanup concentration profiles following complete elimination of a source area. The advection-dispersion model (gray line) predicts a clean-water front arriving at a time corresponding to the average groundwater velocity. The advection-diffusion model (black line) predicts that concentrations will start to decline more rapidly than expected (based on the average groundwater velocity) as clean water rapidly migrates through the highest-permeability strata. However, low but significant contaminant concentrations linger much longer (tailing) due to diffusive contaminant mass exchange between zones of high and low permeability.

Figure 4. Comparison of tracer breakthrough (upper graph) and cleanup curves from advection-dispersion based (gray lines) and advection-diffusion based (black lines) solute transport[3] (adapted from Payne et al. (2008)[1]).


The SERDP/ESTCP programs have funded several projects focusing on how matrix diffusion can impede progress towards reaching site closure, including:

References

  1. ^ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Payne, F.C., Quinnan, J.A. and Potter, S.T., 2008. Remediation hydraulics. CRC Press. ISBN:978-1-4200-0684-1
  2. ^ Fetter, C.W., 1994. Applied Hydrogeology: Macmillan College Publishing Company. New York New York. ISBN-13:978-0130882394
  3. ^ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 ITRC Integrated DNAPL Site Strategy Team, 2011. Integrated DNAPL Site Strategy. Technical/Regulatory Guidance Document, 209 pgs. Report pdf
  4. ^ 4.0 4.1 Hadley, P.W. and Newell, C., 2014. The new potential for understanding groundwater contaminant transport. Groundwater, 52(2), pp.174-186. doi:10.1111/gwat.12135
  5. ^ Sale, T.C., Illangasekare, T., Zimbron, J., Rodriguez, D., Wilkins, B. and Marinelli, F., 2007. AFCEE source zone initiative. Report Prepared for the Air Force Center for Environmental Excellence by Colorado State University and Colorado School of Mines. Report pdf
  6. ^ Sale, T., Parker, B.L., Newell, C.J. and Devlin, J.F., 2013. Management of Contaminants Stored in Low Permeability Zones-A State of the Science Review. ER-1740. Environmental Security Technology Certification Program by Colorado State University Fort Collins Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Project ER-1740. ER-1740
  7. ^ Farhat, S.K., Newell, C.J., Seyedabbasi, M.A., McDade, J.M., Mahler, N.T., Sale, T.C., Dandy, D.S. and Wahlberg, J.J., 2012. Matrix Diffusion Toolkit. ER-201126. Environmental Security Technology Certification Program by GSI Environmental Inc., Houston, Texas. ER-201126
  8. ^ Sale, T. and Newell, C., 2011. A Guide for Selecting Remedies for Subsurface Releases of Chlorinated Solvents. ER-200530. Environmental Security Technology Certification Program (ESTCP) by GSI Environmental Inc., Houston, Texas. ER-200530
  9. ^ Falta, R. 2016. A practical approach for modeling matrix diffusion effects in REMChlor. ER-201426

See Also