In Situ Colloid Mobilization in
Hanford Sediments under
Unsaturated Transient Flow
Conditions: Effect of Irrigation
Pattern
Posted on 2007-05-01 - 00:00
Colloid transport may facilitate off-site transport of
radioactive wastes at the Hanford site, Washington State.
In this study, column experiments were conducted to
examine the effect of irrigation schedule on releases of in
situ colloids from two Hanford sediments during saturated
and unsaturated transient flow and its dependence on solution
ionic strength, irrigation rate, and sediment texture.
Results show that transient flow mobilized more colloids
than steady-state flow. The number of short-term hydrological
pulses was more important than total irrigation volume
for increasing the amount of mobilized colloids. This effect
increased with decreasing ionic strength. At an irrigation
rate equal to 5% of the saturated hydraulic conductivity,
a transient multipulse flow in 100 mM NaNO3 was equivalent
to a 50-fold reduction of ionic strength (from 100 mM to
2 mM) with a single-pulse flow in terms of their positive
effects on colloid mobilization. Irrigation rate was more
important for the initial release of colloids. In addition to
water velocity, mechanical straining of colloids was partly
responsible for the smaller colloid mobilization in the
fine than in the coarse sands, although the fine sand
contained much larger concentrations of colloids than the
coarse sand.
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Zhuang, Jie; McCarthy, John F.; Tyner, John S.; Perfect, Edmund; Flury, Markus (2016). In Situ Colloid Mobilization in
Hanford Sediments under
Unsaturated Transient Flow
Conditions: Effect of Irrigation
Pattern. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/es062757h