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Screening model for volatile pollutants in dual porosity soils
Authors:Mohamed M Hantush  Rao S Govindaraju  Miguel A Marioand Zhonglong Zhang
Institution:

a Land Remediation and Pollution Control Division, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, ORD, USEPA, 26 West Martin Luther King Dr, Cincinnati, OH 45268, USA

b School of Civil Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA

c Department of Land, Air and Water Resources, and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA

d Principal Environmental Systems Modeler, Concurrent Technologies Corporation, 510 Washington Avenue, Suite 120, Bremerton, WA 98337, USA

Abstract:This paper develops mass fraction models for transport and fate of agricultural pollutants in structured two-region soils. Mass fraction index models, based on a semi-infinite domain solution, are derived that describe leaching at depth, vapor losses through soil surface, absorption, and degradation in the dynamic- and stagnant-water soil regions. The models predict that leaching is the result of the combined effect of the upward vapor-phase transport relative to downward advection, residence time relative to half-life, dispersion, and lateral diffusive mass transfer. Simulations show that leached fraction of volatile compounds does not always decrease monotonically with increased residence time relative to the pollutant half-life, as a result of complex interactions among the different physical and biochemical processes. The results show that leaching, volatilization, and degradation losses can be affected significantly by lateral diffusive mass transfer into immobile-water regions and advection relative to dispersion (i.e. Peclet number) in the mobile-water regions. It is shown that solute diffusion into the immobile phase and subsequent biochemical decay reduces leaching and vapor losses through soil surface. Potential use of the modified leaching index for the screening of selected pesticides is illustrated for different soil textures and infiltration rates. The analysis may be useful to the management of pesticides and the design of landfills.
Keywords:Solute transport  Soil  Vapor transport  Pesticides  Screening models  Mobile–immobile phase  Biochemical decay  Adsorption  Dispersion  Mass transfer
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