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Literature Review and Model (COMET) for Colloid/Metals Transport in Porous Media
Author(s) -
Mills William B.,
Liu Sally,
Fong Fred K.
Publication year - 1991
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/j.1745-6584.1991.tb00511.x
Subject(s) - colloid , comet , porous medium , adsorption , chemistry , filtration (mathematics) , metal , environmental science , materials science , porosity , physics , astrobiology , organic chemistry , statistics , mathematics
This paper summarizes topics related to colloid transport in subsurface media. The ultimate objective of the paper is to present a model that can be used to evaluate the significance of colloid facilitated transport on the mobility of metals. Field and laboratory studies are first reviewed to evaluate evidence that colloids are transported in subsurface media. Second, researchers active in the field are contacted to identify areas of ongoing research, and to solicit opinions concerning the level of understanding of mechanisms that control colloid migration. Third, the literature on colloid transport mechanisms is reviewed, with particular emphasis on colloid (and particle) filtration and on colloid stability as influenced by electrical repulsion and Van der Waals attraction. Fourth, a conceptual colloids‐metal transport model (COMET) is developed and incorporated into EPA's CML model, a model that simulates solute migration from a landfill in the unsaturated zone to a receptor (i.e., drinking‐water well) in the saturated zone. Among the major features of the COMET model are the capability to simulate multiple metal species either dissolved or adsorbed to mobile colloids (in conjunction with results from a geochemical equilibrium model), the capability to simulate the influence of multiple colloid types, and to adjust source concentration and duration in the presence of colloids that migrate from a source. These capabilities are embodied in equations (2) and (3) in the main text of this paper. As expected, results from the COMET simulations indicate that mobile phase metal concentrations (dissolved concentration plus concentration adsorbed to mobile colloids) increase as colloid concentrations increase, and arrival times of soluble metal species (solutes) to stationary receptors decrease. When the partition coefficients for solute‐colloid adsorption and solute‐soil matrix adsorption are the same, neither the increase in mobile phase concentration nor decrease in travel time is always significant. However, when partition coefficients for solute‐colloid adsorption are greater than partition coefficients for solute‐soil matrix adsorption, travel times to stationary receptors can dramatically decrease and total mobile phase concentrations dramatically increase.

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