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Neutrally buoyant tracers in hydrogeophysics: Field demonstration in fractured rock
Author(s) -
Shakas Alexis,
Linde Niklas,
Baron Ludovic,
Selker John,
Gerard MarieFrançoise,
Lavenant Nicolas,
Bour Olivier,
Le Borgne Tanguy
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1002/2017gl073368
Subject(s) - hydrogeology , geology , tracer , aquifer , porous medium , groundwater , porosity , hydrology (agriculture) , geophysics , geotechnical engineering , nuclear physics , physics
Electrical and electromagnetic methods are extensively used to map electrically conductive tracers within hydrogeologic systems. Often, the tracers used consist of dissolved salt in water, leading to a denser mixture than the ambient formation water. Density effects are often ignored and rarely modeled but can dramatically affect transport behavior and introduce dynamics that are unrepresentative of the response obtained with classical tracers (e.g., uranine). We introduce a neutrally buoyant tracer consisting of a mixture of salt, water, and ethanol and monitor its movement during push‐pull experiments in a fractured rock aquifer using ground‐penetrating radar. Our results indicate a largely reversible transport process and agree with uranine‐based push‐pull experiments at the site, which is in contrast to results obtained using dense saline tracers. We argue that a shift toward neutrally buoyant tracers in both porous and fractured media would advance hydrogeophysical research and enhance its utility in hydrogeology.