A set of column experiments was conducted to investigate the chemical and physical heterogeneity effect on colloid facilitated transport under slow pore velocity conditions. Pore velocities were kept below 100 cm d-1 for all experiments. Glass beads were packed into columns establishing four different conditions: 1) homogeneous, 2) mixed physical heterogeneity, 3) sequentially layered physical heterogeneity, and 4) chemical heterogeneity. The homogeneous column was packed with glass beads (diameter 500-600 µm), and physical heterogeneities were created by sequential layering or mixing two sizes of glass bead (500-600 µm and 300-400 µm). A chemical heterogeneity was created using 25% of the glass beads coated with hydrophobic molecules (1H-1H-2H-2H-perfluorooctyltrichlorosilane) mixed with 75% pristine glass beads (all 500-600 µm). Input solution with 0.5 mM CsI and 50 mg L-1 colloids (1-µm diameter SiO2) was pulsed into columns under saturated conditions. The physical heterogeneity in the packed glass beads retarded the transport of colloids compared to homogeneous (R = 25.0), but showed only slight differences between sequentially layered (R = 60.7) and mixed heterogeneity(R = 62.4). The column with the chemical, hydrophobic/hydrophilic, heterogeneity removed most of the colloids from the input solution. All column conditions stripped Cs from colloids onto the column matrix of packed glass beads.
Revised: May 7, 2019 |
Published: June 1, 2018
Citation
Rod K.A., W. Um, J. Chun, N. Wu, X. Yin, G. Wang, and K. Neeves. 2018.Effect of Chemical and Physical Heterogeneities on Colloid-Facilitated Cesium Transport.Journal of Contaminant Hydrology 213, no. June 2018:22-27.PNNL-SA-133847.doi:10.1016/j.jconhyd.2018.03.012