3.9 Article

Field, Laboratory and Modeling Evidence for Strong Attenuation of a Cr(VI) Plume in a Mudstone Aquifer Due to Matrix Diffusion and Reaction Processes

Journal

SOIL SYSTEMS
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/soilsystems5010018

Keywords

hexavalent chromium; groundwater plume; matrix diffusion; reaction; attenuation; sedimentary bedrock

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. EPA
  2. Army Corps of Engineers
  3. University Consortium for Field-Focused Groundwater Research
  4. U.S. EPA through the Regional Applied Research Effort (RARE) program [RFQ-OH-14-00122]
  5. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [194091-2011-RGPIN]

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The study investigates the attenuation of a hexavalent chromium plume in sedimentary bedrock through a combination of conventional and high resolution methods. The decline in concentration is attributed to diffusion and reaction processes, highlighting the importance of understanding these mechanisms in remediation efforts.
This study uses a combination of conventional and high resolution field and laboratory methods to investigate processes causing attenuation of a hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) plume in sedimentary bedrock at a former industrial facility. Groundwater plume Cr(VI) concentrations decline by more than three orders of magnitude over a 900 m distance down gradient from the site. Internal plume concentrations generally exhibit stable to declining trends due to diffusive and reactive transport in the low permeability matrix as fluxes from the contamination source dissipate due to natural depletion processes and active remediation efforts. The strong attenuation is attributed to diffusion from mobile groundwater in fractures to immobile porewater in the rock matrix, and reactions causing transformation of aqueous Cr(VI) to low-solubility Cr(III) precipitates, confirmed by high spatial resolution rock matrix contaminant concentrations and comparisons with groundwater concentrations from multi-level sampling within the plume. Field characterization data for the fracture network and matrix properties were used to inform 2-D discrete-fracture matrix (DFM) numerical model simulations that quantify attenuation due to diffusion and reaction processes, which show consistency with field datasets, and provide insights regarding future plume conditions. The combination of field, laboratory and modeling evidence demonstrates effects of matrix diffusion and reaction processes causing strong attenuation of a Cr(VI) plume in a sedimentary bedrock aquifer. This approach has important implications for characterization of sites with Cr(VI) contamination for improved site conceptual models and remediation decision-making.

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