A series of experiments designed to study the separation of flow components from two large undisturbed cores under steady-state rainfall (downward) and return (upward) flows under near-saturated conditions is summarized. The experiments were conducted on soil columns collected from Lancaster Univers
FLOW SEPARATION IN UNDISTURBED SOIL USING MULTIPLE ANIONIC TRACERS. PART 3: UNSTEADY CORE-SCALE INFILTRATION EXPERIMENTS
โ Scribed by M. O. ABDULKABIR; K. J. BEVEN; A. D. REEVES
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 886 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6087
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โฆ Synopsis
Solute transport through structured, undisturbed soil has been studied in transient, unsaturated experiments using columns from grass and woodland sites on the Lancaster University campus. Three anionic tracers have been used, bromide (Br-) and two fluorinated organic acids (pentraflurobenzoic acid and 2,6-diflurobenzoic acid). The process of displacement of stored water from undisturbed columns was investigated using successive inputs of different tracers under similar antecedent conditions. The results indicated that initial breakthrough was rapid, with a relative concentration of 0-8 being reached between 0.4 and 0.5 pore volumes of discharge. It was found that there was an apparent continued discharge of 'old' water, stored in the column before any additions of tracer, even after the addition of a total of 4.9 and 5.4 pore volumes of water for the grass and woodland columns, respectively. The implications of the results of these tracer studies for modelling solute transport in structured soils are considered.
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