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The Enrichment Process of Groundwater Fluorine in Sea Water Intrusion Area of Gaomi City, China
Author(s) -
Chen Qiao,
Hao Decheng,
Gao Zongjun,
Shi Mengjie,
Wang Min,
Feng Jianguo,
Deng Qinghai,
Xia Lu,
Zhang Chunrong,
Yu Yongbo
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
groundwater
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 94
eISSN - 1745-6584
pISSN - 0017-467X
DOI - 10.1111/gwat.12990
Subject(s) - groundwater , weathering , bedrock , quaternary , dissolution , geology , geochemistry , environmental chemistry , mineralogy , chemistry , geomorphology , paleontology , geotechnical engineering
A typical area, Gaomi City in China, was chosen to discuss the enrichment process of groundwater fluorine in sea water intrusion area. The groundwater had fluorine levels of 0.09–10.99 mg/L, with an average concentration of 1.38 mg/L. The high‐fluorine groundwater was mainly distributed in the unconsolidated Quaternary sediments, where concentrations in 83.6% of the samples exceeded the national limit of 1.0 mg/L. The groundwater in the Quaternary sediments also had higher levels of Cl − , TDS, Mg 2+ , and pH and lower levels of Ca 2+ , Co, Ni, and Cu than that in the bedrock. The groundwater fluorine levels in the Quaternary sediments are positively correlated with Cl − , TDS, Mg 2+ , pH, and negatively correlated with Ca 2+ , γCa 2+ /γMg 2+ , Co, Ni, Cu. Geochemical indices of Cl − and TDS indicate sea water intrusion in the Quaternary high‐fluorine groundwater area (F −  > 1.0 mg/L), while they do not indicate any intrusion in the bedrock area. The chemical weathering of minerals was intensified with the intrusion of sea water. Cation exchange was confirmed to occur in the Quaternary sediments and was promoted by sea water intrusion. Cation exchange consumes part of groundwater Ca 2+ and permits more F − dissolving. Consequently, in the Quaternary sediments, the groundwater was supersaturated with CaF 2 minerals and undersaturated with MgF 2 minerals when F −  > 1.0 mg/L, while CaF 2 and MgF 2 minerals both are undersaturated when F −  < 1.0 mg/L. Thus, the chemical weathering of minerals and cation exchange caused by sea water intrusion are the crucial processes controlling the groundwater fluorine levels, which should be considered when the groundwater fluorine enrichment mechanism is discussed along coastal zones.

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