DENSITY-DEPENDENT SOLUTE TRANSPORT IN DISCRETELY-FRACTURED GEOLOGIC MEDIA - IS PREDICTION POSSIBLE

Citation
Sg. Shikaze et al., DENSITY-DEPENDENT SOLUTE TRANSPORT IN DISCRETELY-FRACTURED GEOLOGIC MEDIA - IS PREDICTION POSSIBLE, Journal of contaminant hydrology, 34(3), 1998, pp. 273-291
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Water Resources","Environmental Sciences","Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
ISSN journal
01697722
Volume
34
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Pages
273 - 291
Database
ISI
SICI code
0169-7722(1998)34:3<273:DSTIDG>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
The development of a dense solute plume in a fractured geologic medium can be highly irregular due to both the complexity of the fracture ne twork as well as the presence of convection cells that may arise as a result of the density contrast between the invading solute and the amb ient groundwater. A two-dimensional numerical model has been developed here to investigate density-dependent groundwater flow and solute tra nsport in geologic materials that contain discrete fractures in order to examine some of the complex forms into which plumes can evolve, par ticularly with regard to fracture-matrix interactions. Results from si mulations which involve parallel vertical fractures show that the evol ution of the solute plume is affected by the development of convection cells in the porous matrix blocks between the vertical fractures. In a geologic medium containing a network of regularly spaced horizontal and vertical fractures, complex migration pathways can develop that ar e unexpected even though the geometry and interconnectivity of the fra ctures are known a priori. Downward solute migration can occur in some vertical fractures, while upward migration of less dense fluid can oc cur in others with transient circulation patterns developing in the in tervening porous matrix. Because of the inherent uncertainty associate d with fracture delineation, and because of the irregular nature of un stable dense plumes, deterministic prediction of dense-plume migration pathways and travel times in fractured geologic media will be subject to considerable uncertainty. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All right s reserved.