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Transport mechanisms for radon-222 in soils : a case study for Delaware CountyPuck, Brent D. January 1993 (has links)
Radon transport mechanisms in soils were studied to determine the dominant transport mechanism for Delaware county soils. In modeling the soil, it was assumed that is was homogenous and moisture-free. Two transport mechanisms were investigated, the transport of radon in the soil by molecular diffusion (assumed to be governed by Fick's law) and transport by pressure-induced flow or convection (assumed to be governed by Darcy's law). Following the previous work of W. E. Clements, a general transport equation was described which incorporated both diffusion and convection. In steady-state conditions, a closed-form solution was obtained for the concentration of radon in the soil interstices as a function of depth. Similarly, solutions were examined for transport by diffusion alone. Representative soil parameters were assigned and the diffusion fraction (the ratio of concentration due to diffusion to the concentration due to both diffusion and convection) was calculated. Referring to the work of A. B. Tanner, a radon availability number (RAN) was determined for the soils; the RAN value was a measure of the activity of radon per unit area. Analyses were also performed to determine the significance of pressure variations on calculated diffusion fractions and RAN values. For 99% of the acreage in Delaware county, the diffusion fraction was 0.95 or greater. Therefore, it was concluded that molecular diffusion is the dominant transport mechanism for the soils of Delaware county. / Department of Physics and Astronomy
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Studies Of Solute Transport And Geochemistry In Porous Media : Numerical Modeling And ApplicationsRao, Hayagreeva K V 09 1900 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Experimental Determination of L, Ostwald Solubility Solute Descriptor for Illegal Drugs By Gas Chromatography and Analysis By the Abraham ModelWang, Zhouxing 05 1900 (has links)
The experiment successfully established the mathematical correlations between the logarithm of retention time of illegal drugs with GC system and the solute descriptor L from the Abraham model. the experiment used the method of Gas Chromatography to analyze the samples of illegal drugs and obtain the retention time of each one. Using the Abraham model to calculate and analyze the sorption coefficient of illegal drugs is an effective way to estimate the drugs. Comparison of the experimental data and calculated data shows that the Abraham linear free energy relationship (LFER) model predicts retention behavior reasonably well for most compounds. It can calculate the solute descriptors of illegal drugs from the retention time of GC system. However, the illegal drugs chosen for this experiment were not all ideal for GC analysis. HPLC is the optimal instrument and will be used for future work. HPLC analysis of the illegal drug compounds will allow for the determination of all the solute descriptors allowing one to predict the illegal drugs behavior in various Abraham biological and medical equations. the results can be applied to predict the properties in biological and medical research which the data is difficult to measure. the Abraham model will predict more accurate results by increasing the samples with effective functional groups.
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The Interaction Between Water Movement, Solute Uptake, and Respirational Energy in Plant RootsTawakol, Mohamed Sadek 01 May 1967 (has links)
Sunflower plants (Helianthus annus, var. Russian mammoth) were grown in Hogland nutrient solution. The roots (after being subjected to treatments with either respiratory inhibitors or respiratory stimulators) were used to measure the flux of water Jw, flux of solute Js , and the rate of respiration Jo.
The thermodynamic theory of irreversible processes was used to examine the interaction between fluxes, and the changes in conductivity under different treatments. The rate equations for a root membrane of unit thickness were developed as:
Jw = LwwVw∆p + LwsRT ln C1s/C2s +LwoRT ln C1o/C2o
Js = LswVx∆p + LssRT ln C1s/C2s + LsoRT ln C1o/C2o
Jo = LowVw∆p + Los RT ln C1s/C2s + LooRT ln C1o/C2o
Where: Lww, Lss, Loo are the direct transfer coefficients for water, solute , and oxygen; and Lws, Lsw, Lwo, Low, Lso, Los are the interaction or linked transfer coefficients; Vw partial molal volume (or specific volume) of water , ∆p the difference in pressure between the external solution and xylem: C1s and C2s , C1o and C2o are the salt and oxygen concentration in external solution and xylem respectively.
The results showed that: 1. The nonlinearity of the flux of water through the root system of sunflower is due to causes associated with the membrane (mainly the permeability). 2. The increase in respiration did not increase the permeability of the membrane. 3. The uptake of water due to solute potential under transpiring conditions is small, but important. 4. The uptake of solute in normal root systems is by active process fromsolutions to the zylem and then moves passively to the leaves. 5. An increase in passive water uptake might cause an increase of respiration of the root.
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Semi-analytical solution of solute dispersion model in semi-infinite mediaTaghvaei, P., Pourshahbaz, H., Pu, Jaan H., Pandey, M., Pourshahbaz, V., Abbasi, S., Tofangdar, N. 14 February 2023 (has links)
No / The advection–dispersion equation (ADE) is one of the most widely used methods for estimating natural stream pollution at different locations and times.
In this paper, variational iteration method (VIM) is utilized to obtain a semianalytical solution for 1D ADE in a temporally dependent solute dispersion
within uniformsteady flow. Through a computational validation, the effect of
different parameters such as uniform flow velocity and dispersion coefficient
on the solute concentration values has been investigated. Results show that the
change in velocity has a strong effect on fluid density variation. However, when
the diffusion coefficient has been increased, the change in flow and velocity
behaviors is negligible. To verify the proposed semianalytical solution, the results
were compared to analytical solutions and errors were found to be <0.7% in all
simulations.
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Numerical simulations of solute transport in microchannels impregnated with a biofilmBerglund, Tim January 2023 (has links)
The feasibility of simulating solute transport in a channel impregnated witha biofilm is investigated. Biofilm factors relevant for numerical simulation arestudied to determine a suitable range of simulation. Inside the feasable rangeseveral cases are simulated to gain insight of how different factors influence thesolute transport in and around biofilms.
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Solute/Solvent Interactions And Excited State Photophysics Of 1,4-Diphenyl-1,3-Butadiene And 1,4-Diphenyl-1,3-CyclopentadieneDickson, Nicole M. 15 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis of solute transport on a harvested hillslope in the southern Appalachian MountainsMoore, Erin Amanda 06 June 2008 (has links)
Interest in transport of dissolved nitrogen (N) and carbon (C) in forested ecosystems is growing because of potential effects of these solutes on streamwater quality and implications for C sequestration. Additional research will further the understanding about the dynamics of these soil solutes, particularly in response to harvesting of forests. Also, the purported role of riparian buffers, where logging is restricted along stream channels, in retaining soil solutes is not well studied in the steeply sloping terrain of the southern Appalachian Mountains. I examined solute transport in a first-order watershed in the Nantahala National Forest in North Carolina that was harvested in February 2006 with retention of a 10-m riparian buffer.
To quantify the movement of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN), dissolved organic nitrogen (DON), and dissolved organic carbon (DOC), four transects of lysimeters, approximately 30 m apart, were installed perpendicular to the stream on one hillslope. Porous ceramic cup (2-bar) lysimeters were installed in each transect 1, 4, 10, 16, 30, and 50 m from the stream in the A horizon and B horizon, and 4, 16, and 50 m from the stream in the saprolite layer. Samples were removed from the lysimeters 24 hr after 50 centibars of tension were placed on them, and riparian groundwater well and stream samples were collected at the same time as lysimeter samples. Collection of samples from the lysimeters, wells, and stream occurred every four to six weeks for one calendar year beginning March 2007. A 16-wk laboratory N mineralization study was conducted on A horizon soils.
Mean nitrate values in the soil solution of the A horizon in the spring were 1.53mg-N/L and decreased through the growing season to 0.030mg-N/L. Mean soil solution nitrate values in the B horizon and saprolite layer were 0.40mg-N/L in the spring and summer and decreased to 0.031mg-N/L in the winter. Mean soil solution ammonium concentrations were higher in the A horizon (0.090mg-N/L) than the B horizon and saprolite layer (0.034mg-N/L) and were lowest during the summer and fall. Dissolved organic C was significantly higher in the A horizon, with values ranging from 2.3mg/L to 599mg/L, than in the relatively stable B horizon and saprolite (1.9mg/L to 36.6mg/L). Dissolved organic C was logarithmically correlated to DON (r2 = 0.64), and DON values were highest in the A horizon (0.70mg/L). Cumulative N mineralization potential ranged from 48.1mg-N/kg to 75.6mg-N/kg and was not a useful predictor for nitrate soil solution values.
Nitrate leached vertically, and a large percentage of nitrate was stored in the B horizon and saprolite. Ammonium, DON, and DOC did not appear to leach vertically because they did not increase in the B horizon or saprolite layer. Ammonium, DON, and DOC are less mobile in soil solution than nitrate. The 10-m riparian zone had little impact on nitrate, ammonium, DON, and DOC removal. Nitrate remaining in the A horizon was likely removed through plant uptake in the harvested area before reaching the riparian zone. There was no detectable difference between ammonium concentrations in the harvested area and riparian zone likely because of limited mobility. The riparian zone did not remove excess DON or DOC, and in some transects was a source of DON and DOC. Nitrate and DOC concentrations were highly variable among transects and locations within transects. This may be caused by sensitivity of these solutes to site heterogeneity. This suggests that a large number of lysimeters should be used to account for this variability in future studies to ensure accuracy.
This study observed limited vertical leaching of ammonium, DON, and DOC through the profile. However, excess nitrate was observed moving from the A horizon into the B horizon and saprolite layer, suggesting the potential for delivery to the stream via subsurface transport and the need for attenuation of nitrate by the riparian zone. Because of low concentrations of nitrate entering the riparian zone during this study, the capacity for riparian attenuation of nitrate was not demonstrated. / Master of Science
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Single-well tracer push-pull method development for subsurface process characterization / Early-time tracer injection-flowback test for stimulated fracture characterization, numerical simulation uses and efficiency for flow and solute transportKarmakar, Shyamal 15 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Analysis Of Solute Transport In Porous Media For Nonreactive And Sorbing Solutes Using Hybrid FCT ModelSrinivasan, C 01 1900 (has links)
The thesis deals with the numerical modeling of nonreactive and nonlinearly sorbing solutes in groundwater and analysis of the effect of heterogeneity resulting from spatial variation of physical and chemical parameters on the transport of solutes. For this purpose, a hybrid flux corrected transport (FCT) and central difference method based on operator-split approach is developed for advection-dispersion solute transport equation. The advective transport is solved using the FCT technique, while the dispersive transport is solved using a conventional, fully implicit, finite difference scheme. Three FCT methods are developed and extension to multidimensional cases are discussed.
The FCT models developed are anlaysed using test problems possessing analytical solutions for one and two dimensional cases, while analysing advection and dispersion dominated transport situations. Different initial and boundary conditions, which mimic the laboratory and field situations are analysed in order to study numerical dispersion, peak cliping and grid orientation. The developed models are tested to study their relative merits and weaknesses for various grid Peclet and Courant numbers. It is observed from the one dimensional results that all the FCT models perform well for continuous solute sources under varying degrees of Courant number restriction. For sharp solute pulses FCT1 and FCT3 methods fail to simulate the fronts for advection dominated situations even for moderate Courant numbers. All the FCT models can be extended to multidimensions using a dimensional-split approach while FCT3 can be made fully multidimensional. It is observed that a dimensional-split approach allows use of higher Courant numbers while tracking the fronts accurately for the cases studied. The capability of the FCT2 model is demonstrated in handling situations where the flow is not aligned along the grid direction. It is observed that FCT2 method is devoid of grid orientation error, which is a common problem for many numerical methods based on Cartesian co-ordinate system.
The hybrid FCT2 numerical model which is observed to perform better among the three FCT models is extended to model transport of sorbing solutes. The present study analyses the case of nonlinear sorption with a view to extend the model for any reactive transport situation wherein the chemical reactions are nonlinear in nature. A two step approach is adopted in the present study for coupling the partial differential equation governing the transport and the nonlinear algebraic equation governing the equilibrium sorption. The suitability of explicit-implicit (EI - form) formulation for obtaining accurate solution coupling the transport equation with the nonlinear algebraic equation solved using a Newton-Raphson method is demonstrated. The performance of the numerical model is tested for a range of Peclet numbers for modelling self-sharpening and self-smearing concentration profiles resulting from nonlinear sorption. It is observed that FCT2 model based on this formulation simulates the fronts quite accurately for both advection and dispersion dominated situations. The delay in the solute mobility and additional dispersion are analysed varying the statistical parameters characterising the heterogeneity namely, correlation scale and variance during the transport of solutes and comparisons are drawn with invariant, cases. The impact of dispersion during the heterogeneous transport is discussed.
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