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Anomalous solute transport in saturated porous media: linking transport model parameters to electrical and nuclear magnetic resonance properties

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Anomalous solute transport in saturated porous media: linking transport model parameters to electrical and nuclear magnetic resonance properties. / Swanson, Ryan D.; Binley, Andrew; Keating, Kristina et al.
In: Water Resources Research, Vol. 51, No. 2, 13.03.2015, p. 1264-1283.

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Swanson RD, Binley A, Keating K, France S, Osterman G, Day-Lewis F et al. Anomalous solute transport in saturated porous media: linking transport model parameters to electrical and nuclear magnetic resonance properties. Water Resources Research. 2015 Mar 13;51(2):1264-1283. Epub 2015 Jan 31. doi: 10.1002/2014WR015284

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Swanson, Ryan D. ; Binley, Andrew ; Keating, Kristina et al. / Anomalous solute transport in saturated porous media : linking transport model parameters to electrical and nuclear magnetic resonance properties. In: Water Resources Research. 2015 ; Vol. 51, No. 2. pp. 1264-1283.

Bibtex

@article{9ac6921abe944e5c8dcaf47fd56596e1,
title = "Anomalous solute transport in saturated porous media: linking transport model parameters to electrical and nuclear magnetic resonance properties",
abstract = "The advection-dispersion equation (ADE) fails to describe commonly observed non-Fickian solute transport in saturated porous media, necessitating the use of other models such as the dual-domain mass-transfer (DDMT) model. DDMT model parameters are commonly calibrated via curve fitting, providing little insight into the relation between effective parameters and physical properties of the medium. There is a clear need for material characterization techniques that can provide insight into the geometry and connectedness of pore spaces related to transport model parameters. Here, we consider proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), direct-current (DC) resistivity, and complex conductivity (CC) measurements for this purpose, and assess these methods using glass beads as a control and two different samples of the zeolite clinoptilolite, a material that demonstrates non-Fickian transport due to intragranular porosity. We estimate DDMT parameters via calibration of a transport model to column-scale solute tracer tests, and compare NMR, DC resistivity, CC results, which reveal that grain size alone does not control transport properties and measured geophysical parameters; rather, volume and arrangement of the pore space play important roles. NMR cannot provide estimates of more-mobile and less-mobile pore volumes in the absence of tracer tests because these estimates depend critically on the selection of a material-dependent and flow-dependent cutoff time. Increased electrical connectedness from DC resistivity measurements are associated with greater mobile pore space determined from transport model calibration. CC was hypothesized to be related to length scales of mass transfer, but the CC response is unrelated to DDMT.",
author = "Swanson, {Ryan D.} and Andrew Binley and Kristina Keating and Samantha France and Gordon Osterman and Frederick Day-Lewis and Kamini Singha",
note = "Copyright 2015 American Geophysical Union. ",
year = "2015",
month = mar,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1002/2014WR015284",
language = "English",
volume = "51",
pages = "1264--1283",
journal = "Water Resources Research",
issn = "0043-1397",
publisher = "AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Anomalous solute transport in saturated porous media

T2 - linking transport model parameters to electrical and nuclear magnetic resonance properties

AU - Swanson, Ryan D.

AU - Binley, Andrew

AU - Keating, Kristina

AU - France, Samantha

AU - Osterman, Gordon

AU - Day-Lewis, Frederick

AU - Singha, Kamini

N1 - Copyright 2015 American Geophysical Union.

PY - 2015/3/13

Y1 - 2015/3/13

N2 - The advection-dispersion equation (ADE) fails to describe commonly observed non-Fickian solute transport in saturated porous media, necessitating the use of other models such as the dual-domain mass-transfer (DDMT) model. DDMT model parameters are commonly calibrated via curve fitting, providing little insight into the relation between effective parameters and physical properties of the medium. There is a clear need for material characterization techniques that can provide insight into the geometry and connectedness of pore spaces related to transport model parameters. Here, we consider proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), direct-current (DC) resistivity, and complex conductivity (CC) measurements for this purpose, and assess these methods using glass beads as a control and two different samples of the zeolite clinoptilolite, a material that demonstrates non-Fickian transport due to intragranular porosity. We estimate DDMT parameters via calibration of a transport model to column-scale solute tracer tests, and compare NMR, DC resistivity, CC results, which reveal that grain size alone does not control transport properties and measured geophysical parameters; rather, volume and arrangement of the pore space play important roles. NMR cannot provide estimates of more-mobile and less-mobile pore volumes in the absence of tracer tests because these estimates depend critically on the selection of a material-dependent and flow-dependent cutoff time. Increased electrical connectedness from DC resistivity measurements are associated with greater mobile pore space determined from transport model calibration. CC was hypothesized to be related to length scales of mass transfer, but the CC response is unrelated to DDMT.

AB - The advection-dispersion equation (ADE) fails to describe commonly observed non-Fickian solute transport in saturated porous media, necessitating the use of other models such as the dual-domain mass-transfer (DDMT) model. DDMT model parameters are commonly calibrated via curve fitting, providing little insight into the relation between effective parameters and physical properties of the medium. There is a clear need for material characterization techniques that can provide insight into the geometry and connectedness of pore spaces related to transport model parameters. Here, we consider proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), direct-current (DC) resistivity, and complex conductivity (CC) measurements for this purpose, and assess these methods using glass beads as a control and two different samples of the zeolite clinoptilolite, a material that demonstrates non-Fickian transport due to intragranular porosity. We estimate DDMT parameters via calibration of a transport model to column-scale solute tracer tests, and compare NMR, DC resistivity, CC results, which reveal that grain size alone does not control transport properties and measured geophysical parameters; rather, volume and arrangement of the pore space play important roles. NMR cannot provide estimates of more-mobile and less-mobile pore volumes in the absence of tracer tests because these estimates depend critically on the selection of a material-dependent and flow-dependent cutoff time. Increased electrical connectedness from DC resistivity measurements are associated with greater mobile pore space determined from transport model calibration. CC was hypothesized to be related to length scales of mass transfer, but the CC response is unrelated to DDMT.

U2 - 10.1002/2014WR015284

DO - 10.1002/2014WR015284

M3 - Journal article

VL - 51

SP - 1264

EP - 1283

JO - Water Resources Research

JF - Water Resources Research

SN - 0043-1397

IS - 2

ER -