Title of article
Dual-domain solute transfer and transport processes: evaluation in batch and transport experiments
Author/Authors
Nathan W. Haws، نويسنده , , Bhabani S. Das، نويسنده , , P. Suresh C. Rao، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
24
From page
257
To page
280
Abstract
Soil macropore networks establish a dual-domain transport scenario in which water and solutes are preferentially channeled through soil macropores while slowly diffusing into and out of the bulk soil matrix. The influence of macropore networks on intra-ped solute diffusion and preferential transport in a soil typical of subsurface-drained croplands in the Midwestern United States was studied in batch- and column-scale experiments. In the batch diffusion studies with soil aggregates, the estimated diffusion radius (length) of the soil aggregates corresponded to the half-spacing of the aggregate fissures, suggesting that the intra-ped fissures reduced the diffusion impedance and preferentially allowed solutes to diffuse into the soil matrix. In the column-scale solute transport experiments, the average diffusion radius (estimated from HYDRUS-2D simulations and a first-order diffusive transfer term) was nearly double that of the batch-scale study. This increase may be attributed to a loss of pore continuity and a compounding of the small diffusion impedance through macropores at the larger scale. The column-scale solute transport experiments also suggest that two preferential networks exist in the soil. At and near soil saturation, a primary network of large macropores (possibly root channels and earthworm burrows) dominate advective transport, causing a high degree of physical and sorption nonequilibrium and simultaneous breakthrough of a nonreactive (bromide) and a reactive (alachlor) solute. As the saturation level decreases, the primary network drains, while transport through smaller macropores (possibly intra-ped features) continues, resulting in a reduced degree of nonequilibrium and separation in the breakthrough curves of bromide and alachlor.
Keywords
Preferential transport , Nonequilibrium , Macropore flow , Dual-porosity , diffusion , mass transfer
Journal title
Journal of Contaminant Hydrology
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Journal of Contaminant Hydrology
Record number
693596
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