Estimation of Capillary‐Associated NAPL‐Water Interfacial Areas for Unconsolidated Porous Media by Kinetic Interface Sensitive (KIS) Tracer Method

2023 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Estimation of Capillary‐Associated NAPL‐Water Interfacial Areas for Unconsolidated Porous Media by Kinetic Interface Sensitive (KIS) Tracer Method​
Tatomir, A.; Gao, H.; Abdullah, H.; Pötzl, C.; Karadimitriou, N.; Steeb, H. & Licha, T. et al.​ (2023) 
Water Resources Research59(12) art. e2023WR035387​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2023WR035387 

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Tatomir, Alexandru; Gao, Huhao; Abdullah, Hiwa; Pötzl, Christopher; Karadimitriou, Nikolaos; Steeb, Holger; Licha, Tobias; Class, Holger; Helmig, Rainer; Sauter, Martin
Abstract
Abstract By employing kinetic interface sensitive (KIS) tracers, we investigate three different types of glass‐bead materials and three natural porous media systems to quantitatively characterize the influence of the porous‐medium grain‐, pore‐size and texture on the specific capillary‐associated interfacial area (FIFA) between an organic liquid and water. By interpreting the breakthrough curves (BTCs) of the reaction product of the KIS tracer hydrolysis, we obtain a relation for the specific IFA and wetting phase saturation. The immiscible displacement process coupled with the reactive tracer transport across the fluid–fluid interface is simulated with a Darcy‐scale numerical model. Linear relations between the specific capillary‐associated FIFA and the inverse mean grain diameter can be established for measurements with glass beads and natural soils. We find that the grain size has minimal effect on the capillary‐associated FIFA for unconsolidated porous media formed by glass beads. Conversely, for unconsolidated porous media formed by natural soils, the capillary‐associated FIFA linearly increases with the inverse mean grain diameter, and it is much larger than that from glass beads. This indicates that the surface roughness and the irregular shape of the grains can cause the capillary‐associated FIFA to increase. The results are also compared with the data collected from literature, measured with high resolution microtomography and partitioning tracer methods. Our study considerably expands the applicability range of the KIS tracers and enhances the confidence in the robustness of the method.
Key Points The capillary‐associated interfacial area is measured with the kinetic interface sensitive tracer method in six unconsolidated porous media It is found the maximum specific capillary‐associated interfacial area is linearly correlated to the inverse mean grain diameters The higher capillary‐associated interfacial area is found in natural porous media due to surface roughness and irregular grain shapes
Abstract By employing kinetic interface sensitive (KIS) tracers, we investigate three different types of glass‐bead materials and three natural porous media systems to quantitatively characterize the influence of the porous‐medium grain‐, pore‐size and texture on the specific capillary‐associated interfacial area (FIFA) between an organic liquid and water. By interpreting the breakthrough curves (BTCs) of the reaction product of the KIS tracer hydrolysis, we obtain a relation for the specific IFA and wetting phase saturation. The immiscible displacement process coupled with the reactive tracer transport across the fluid–fluid interface is simulated with a Darcy‐scale numerical model. Linear relations between the specific capillary‐associated FIFA and the inverse mean grain diameter can be established for measurements with glass beads and natural soils. We find that the grain size has minimal effect on the capillary‐associated FIFA for unconsolidated porous media formed by glass beads. Conversely, for unconsolidated porous media formed by natural soils, the capillary‐associated FIFA linearly increases with the inverse mean grain diameter, and it is much larger than that from glass beads. This indicates that the surface roughness and the irregular shape of the grains can cause the capillary‐associated FIFA to increase. The results are also compared with the data collected from literature, measured with high resolution microtomography and partitioning tracer methods. Our study considerably expands the applicability range of the KIS tracers and enhances the confidence in the robustness of the method.
Key Points The capillary‐associated interfacial area is measured with the kinetic interface sensitive tracer method in six unconsolidated porous media It is found the maximum specific capillary‐associated interfacial area is linearly correlated to the inverse mean grain diameters The higher capillary‐associated interfacial area is found in natural porous media due to surface roughness and irregular grain shapes
Issue Date
2023
Journal
Water Resources Research 
ISSN
0043-1397
eISSN
1944-7973
Language
English
Sponsor
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft https://doi.org/10.13039/501100001659

Reference

Citations


Social Media