Loadingā€¦

Chaotic advection and reaction during engineered injection and extraction in heterogeneous porous media

During in situ remediation of contaminated groundwater, a treatment solution is often injected into the contaminated region to initiate reactions that degrade the contaminant. Degradation reactions only occur where the treatment solution and the contaminated groundwater are close enough that mixing...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Water resources research 2014-02, Vol.50 (2), p.1433-1447
Main Authors: Neupauer, Roseanna M., Meiss, James D., Mays, David C.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:During in situ remediation of contaminated groundwater, a treatment solution is often injected into the contaminated region to initiate reactions that degrade the contaminant. Degradation reactions only occur where the treatment solution and the contaminated groundwater are close enough that mixing will bring them together. Degradation is enhanced when the treatment solution is spread into the contaminated region, thereby increasing the spatial extent of mixing and degradation reactions. Spreading results from local velocity variations that emerge from aquifer heterogeneity and from spatial variations in the external forcings that drive flow. Certain patterns in external forcings have been shown to create chaotic advection, which is known to enhance spreading of solutes in groundwater flow and other laminar flows. This work uses numerical simulations of flow and reactive transport to investigate how aquifer heterogeneity changes the qualitative and quantitative aspects of chaotic advection in an aquifer, and the extent to which these changes enhance contaminant degradation. We generate chaotic advection using engineered injection and extraction (EIE), an approach that uses sequential injection and extraction of water in wells surrounding the contaminated region to create timeā€dependent flow fields that promote plume spreading. We demonstrate that as the degree of heterogeneity increases, both plume spreading and contaminant degradation increase; however, the increase in contaminant degradation is small relative to the increase in plume spreading. Our results show that the combined effects of EIE and heterogeneity produce substantially more stretching than either effect separately. Key Points Chaotic advection produces plume spreading in aquifers Heterogeneity increases spreading in a chaotic flow Plume geometry aligns with unstable manifolds of periodic points in chaotic flow
ISSN:0043-1397
1944-7973
DOI:10.1002/2013WR014057