Title: Mathematical Modeling of
1Mathematical Modeling of Pollutant Transport in
Groundwater
Rajesh Srivastava Department of Civil
Engineering IIT Kanpur
2- Outline of the Talk
- Sources
- Processes
- Modelling
- Applications
3- Sources of GW Pollution
- Irrigation
- Landfills
- Underground Storage tanks
- Industry
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5- Advection
- Mass transport due to the flow of the water
- The direction and rate of transport coincide with
that of the groundwater flow. - Diffusion
- Mixing due to concentration gradients
- Dispersion
- Mechanical mixing due to movement of fluids
through the pore space
6Dispersion
- Spreading of mass due to
- Velocity differences within pores
- Path differences due to the tortuosity of the
pore network.
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9Pore Spaces
Stagnant or Immobile liquid
Mobile/flowing liquid
Intra-particle pores
Gas
Figure Courtesy Sylvie Bouffard,
Biohydrometallurgy group, Vancouver 12 18
10Brief Chronology
- Unsaturated flow equation by Richards (1931)
- Coats and Smith (1964) proposed dead-end pores in
oil wells - Equilibrium reactive transport theories proposed
- Breakthrough curves with pronounced tailings
observed - Non-equilibrium models developed
- Goltz and Roberts (1986) physical non-equilibrium
model - Brusseau et al. (1989) developed MPNE
- Slow and Fast Transport model developed by Kartha
(2008)
11Experimental Setup
INFLOW A
OUTFLOW B
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13Conservation of Liquid Mass
where Sl is source/sink term.
Darcy velocity in unsaturated porous medium
Hydraulic head based on elevation head z
Hydraulic conductivity
Darcy velocity
Liquid pressure in unsaturated conditions
Intrinsic permeability in unsaturated conditions
14Brooks-Corey and van Genuchten Relations
- Relation between suction pressure, liquid
pressure, and liquid saturation - Relation between relative permeability and liquid
saturation
Effective saturation is given as
Gas pressure Pg is considered zero, therefore
B.C. - Model V.G. Model
Suction pressure
Relative Permeability
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18- Transport Model
- Reactive advective-dispersive equation
- Here we use multi-process non-equilibrium
equations. - MPNE model
- Liquid exists in mobile and immobile phase.
- Solid in contact with mobile and immobile liquid.
- Instantaneous sorption mechanism between liquids
and solids. - Rate-limited sorption mechanism between liquids
and solids.
19MPNE Equations
Where, Si - concentration of metal in sorbed
phase (i.e. solid), Ki - adsorption
coefficient, ki - sorption rate, a - mass
transfer rate between mobile and immobile liquid,
Fi - fraction for instantaneous sorption, f
- fraction of sorption site in contact with
mobile liquid.
20- Numerical Solution for Unsaturated Flow
- The mass conservation equation is solved for
liquid pressure - Implicit finite-difference method is used
Residual form of conservation of mass equation
for liquid
Taylors series expansion of residual equation
will lead to the following form
Pressure values updated at each iteration step
21- Numerical Solution for MPNE Transport
- Conservation of mass for metal is solved for
concentration in liquid - Implicit finite-difference in time step used for
formulations - Residual formulation obtained for concentration
in mobile liquid
The finite-difference formulation for sorbed
concentration is
The residual formulation for solute concentration
in mobile liquid is
Taylors series expansion of the above residual
equation
Updated Concentration is
22Verification of the Numerical Model FLOW
(Compared with VGs Flow Model and Kuo et al.
(1989) Infiltration Model)
150 cm
ksat 5.90510-9 cm2
e 0.45
sr 0.22
a 0.025 cm
? 0.394
?z 1 cm
?t 100 s
23MPNE Transport
30 cm
Input Parameters
?b 1.360 g.cm-3 a 8.68110-7 s-1
? 0.473 km 7.67310-4 s-1
q 5.91410-4 cm.s-1 kim 7.67310-4 s-1
dz 0.34 cm Km 0.429 cm3.g-1
L 30.0 cm Kim 0.416 cm3.g-1
T0 7.672 days (662861 s) f 0.929
Fm 0.5 Fim 0.5
24Concept of Slow and Fast Transport
- Movement of liquids is heterogeneous
- Liquid flow is conceptualized as slow and fast
zones - Multiple sources of non-equilibrium solute
interactions occurs between solids and different
liquids 4
25Conservation of solute mass
- Solute mass conservation in fast liquid
26Conservation of solute mass.
- Rate of change of instantaneously sorbed
solute mass
- Rate of change of rate-limited sorbed mass
Similar instantaneous and rate-limited sorption
exist for immobile liquid
- Solute mass conservation in immobile liquid
27FINITE-DIFFERENCE FORMULATION OF SFT MODEL
The implicit finite-difference form of metal mass
conservation in fast moving liquid in a FD cell
is
The implicit finite-difference form of metal mass
conservation in slow moving liquid in a FD cell
is
The implicit finite-difference form of metal mass
conservation in immobile liquid in a FD cell is
28Formulations continued.
Residual equations are formed for the
finite-difference equations for conservation of
metal mass in fast and slow moving
liquids. Residual equations expanded using
Taylors series approximation.
The linear system of equations is solved Update
concentration terms
29Numerical Model Validation..
Verification and Evaluation (Brusseau et. al.,
1989)
Bulk density 1.36 g.cm-3
Porosity 0.473
Inflow rate 5.11 cm.d-1
Dispersivity 0.34 cm
Column height 30.0 cm
Immobile saturation 0.071
Sorption coefficient Ksl 0.429 cm3.g-1
Sorption coefficient Kim 0.416 cm3.g-1
Sorption rate 0.663 d-1
Mass transfer rate aim 0.075 d-1
Instantaneous sorption fraction 0.50
Pulse duration 7.67 d
Brusseau, M.L., Jessup, R.E., Rao, P.S.C.
Modeling the transport of solutes.. Water
Resources Research 25 (9), 1971 1988 (1989)
30REMEDIATION OF GROUNDWATER POLLUTION DUE TO
CHROMIUM IN NAURIA KHERA AREA OF KANPUR
Central Pollution Control Board Lucknow National
Geophysical Research Institute Hyderabad Industria
l Toxicology Research Centre Lucknow Indian
Institute of Technology Kanpur
31 5 km2
Location map of Nauriyakhera IDA, Kanpur, U.P.
32- CGWB Observations in Kanpur 1994-2000
-
- Cr 6 found in groundwater generally exceed gt
0.11 mg/l - (Permissible Limit is 0.05 mg/l)
- Cr 6 observed in Industrial areas in depth range
of 15 40 m gt10 mg/l - Nauriakhera (Panki Thermal Power Plant Area) Cr
6 - 14 m - 8.0 mg/l
- 15 m 0.31 mg/l
- 35 m 7.0 mg/l
- 40 m 0.68 mg/l
-
- Used Chromite ore (Sodium Bichromate) dumped in
pits and low lying areas cause of Cr pollution - Persistence in the phreatic zone up to 40 m depth
despite presence of thick clay zones
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34 Observation Wells in Nauriyakhera IDA, Kanpur,
U.P.
35March 2005
Total Chromium (mg/l) in groundwater -
Nauriyakhera IDA, Kanpur
36Total Chromium (mg/l) in groundwater
-Nauriyakhera IDA, Kanpur
37Fence Diagram Nauriyakhera IDA, Kanpur
38Total Chromium Plume from Source after 10 years
39Total Chromium Plume from Source after 40 years
40Application to Heap Leaching
- Heap leaching is a simple, low-cost method of
recovering precious metals from low-grade ores. - Ore is stacked in heaps over an impermeable
leaching-pad. - Leach liquid is irrigated at the top
- Liquid reacts with metal and dissolves it.
- Dissolved metal collected at the bottom in the
leaching pad.
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42Why Heap Leaching ?
- Traditional methods of gold extraction viz - ore
sieving, washing, etc. are obsolete and
uneconomical. - Pyro-metallurgy is highly costly and non-viable
for low-grade ores. - Leaching is the only process to extract metallic
content from the low-grade ores. - Among leaching methods Heap leaching is most
economical
43Why we are interested in Heap Leaching?
- Heaps are generally stacked in unsaturated
conditions. - The dissolution reaction occurs in the presence
of oxygen. - The flow of liquid and metals inside the heaps
are governed by principles of flow and solute
transport through porous medium - Solving unsaturated flow equations and reactive
transport equations enables us to model heap
leaching process.
44Types of leaching
- Underground in-situ leaching
- Tank leaching
- Heap leaching
- Pressure leaching
Heap
- Impermeable leach pad
- Liners
- Crushed metal ore
- Irrigation system
- Pregnant solution pond
- Barren solution pond
Components of a heap
45MPNE Model
- Effluent outflow into the leaching pad
Average outflow Cumulative outflow
- The average outflow gradually attains steady
state - Sudden decrease in outflow on stoppage of
irrigation - Rate of recovery reduced after stoppage
46MPNE Model
Sensitivity Analyses of MPNE parameters
- Sensitivity Analysis conducted to assess
influence of model input parameter on output. - Parameters considered are a, km and kim
Influence of a
Recovery curves
47MPNE Model - Sensitivity Analyses..
Higher recovery and higher peaks for cases having
higher sorption rates
Breakthrough Curves
Recovery Curves
48MPNE Model
- Effect of variation in irrigation
Recovery Curves
Outflow Curves
Higher recovery of metal at slower irrigation
rate
Breakthrough Curves
49Two Dimensional Heap Leaching by SFT method
1.5 m
SFT Parameters ksl 4.9810-6 s-1 (ssl)max
0.065 asf 2.87510-7 s-1
0.5 m
- Grid Spacing
- Horizontal Direction 1.72 cm
- Vertical Direction 1.69 cm
2.5 m
Average concentration of metal in the outflow is
computed as
50SFT Model
- Sensitivity Analyses of SFT Parameters
Influence of asf
Breakthrough curves
asf has considerable influence in breakthroughs
and recovery of metal after the irrigation is
stopped
Recovery Curves
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