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SW—Soil and Water: Transport of Particulate and Colloid-sorbed Contaminants through Soil, Part 1: General Principles

✍ Scribed by M.B. McGechan; D.R. Lewis


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
411 KB
Volume
83
Category
Article
ISSN
1537-5110

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✦ Synopsis


Literature is reviewed describing through soil colloid-facilitated transport of contaminants such as phosphorus, pesticides and other agrochemicals, plus a range of biological microorganisms. Smaller microorganism (viruses and bacteria) are transported mainly (like chemical contaminants) by adsorption onto otherwise harmless mobile colloidal clay particles or soil organic matter. Potential impediments to movement of colloids through soil can be subdivided into straining and filtration, depending on whether a particle has a dimension similar to pores (leading to physical trapping) or much smaller. Filtration mechanisms, including interception, diffusion and sedimentation, have been compared to those described in the extensive engineering literature on deep bed filtration. Sorption processes are discussed, both those to static components of the soil matrix and onto mobile colloids. The chemical influences of ionic strength and pH to colloid transport are reviewed, as well as the double diffusion layer as a mechanism linking particles to surfaces. Numerous reported studies using column experiments to measure colloid or contaminant transport through soil have been reviewed. Many indicate the importance of macropore flow which allows rapid unrestricted transport of contaminant carrying colloids. Some experiments determine a filtration coefficient for a simple filtration equation representing straining and filtration processes. The few existing models (incorporating this filtration equation), both for column experiments and for the field situation, are reviewed as background to further development of a field-scale model representing colloid-facilitated transport of a range of chemical and microbiological contaminants.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


SW—Soil and Water: Transport of Particul
✍ M.B. McGechan 📂 Article 📅 2002 🏛 Elsevier Science 🌐 English ⚖ 254 KB

It was established in Part 1 that potential impediments to movement of colloids through soil can be subdivided into straining and filtration, depending on whether a particle has a dimension similar to pores (leading to physical trapping) or much smaller. Information about size distributions of parti

SW—Soil and Water: Sorption of Phosphoru
✍ M.B. McGechan; D.R. Lewis 📂 Article 📅 2002 🏛 Elsevier Science 🌐 English ⚖ 473 KB

The very extensive literature on phosphorus (P) sorption studies is reviewed with the intention of selecting equations and parameter values for use in a soil P dynamics model. Processes considered are fast reversible sorption of P onto surface sites, and various slower processes including reactions