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Field Tracer Tests to Evaluate Transport Properties of Tryptophan and Humic Acid in Karst
Author(s) -
Frank Simon,
Goeppert Nadine,
Goldscheider Nico
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.13015
Subject(s) - tracer , karst , fluorometer , humic acid , chemistry , aquifer , tryptophan , environmental chemistry , soil science , hydrology (agriculture) , fluorescence , environmental science , groundwater , geology , amino acid , geotechnical engineering , biochemistry , paleontology , fertilizer , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , nuclear physics
The monitoring of water quality, especially of karst springs, requires methods for rapidly estimating and quantifying parameters that indicate contamination. In the last few years, fluorescence‐based measurements of tryptophan and humic acid have become a promising tool to assess water quality in near real‐time. In this study, we conducted comparative tracer tests in a karst experimental site to investigate the transport properties and behavior of tryptophan and humic acid in a natural karst aquifer. These two tracers were compared with the conservative tracer uranine. Fluorescence measurements were conducted with an online field fluorometer and in the laboratory. The obtained breakthrough curves (BTCs) and the modeling results demonstrate that (1) the online field fluorometer is suitable for real‐time fluorescence measurements of all three tracers; (2) the transport parameters obtained for uranine, tryptophan, and humic acid are comparable in the fast flow areas of the karst system; (3) the transport velocities of humic acid are slower and the resulting residence times are accordingly higher, compared to uranine and tryptophan, in the slower and longer flow paths; (4) the obtained BTCs reveal additional information about the investigated karst system. As a conclusion, the experiments show that the transport properties of tryptophan are similar to those of uranine while humic acid is partly transported slower and with retardation. These findings allow a better and quantitative interpretation of the results when these substances are used as natural fecal and contamination indicators.