63 research outputs found
A nonlinear random walk approach to concentration-dependent contaminant transport in porous media
We propose a nonlinear random walk model to describe the dynamics of dense
contaminant plumes in porous media. A coupling between concentration and
velocity fields is found, so that transport displays non-Fickian features. The
qualitative behavior of the pollutant spatial profiles and moments is explored
with the help of Monte Carlo simulation, within a Continuous Time Random Walk
approach. Model outcomes are then compared with experimental measurements of
variable-density contaminant transport in homogeneous and saturated vertical
columns.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Dispersion enhancement and damping by buoyancy driven flows in 2D networks of capillaries
The influence of a small relative density difference on the displacement of
two miscible liquids is studied experimentally in transparent 2D networks of
micro channels. Both stable displacements in which the denser fluid enters at
the bottom of the cell and displaces the lighter one and unstable displacements
in which the lighter fluid is injected at the bottom and displaces the denser
one are realized. Except at the lowest mean flow velocity U, the average
of the relative concentration satisfies a convection-dispersion
equation. The dispersion coefficient is studied as function of the relative
magnitude of fluid velocity and of the velocity of buoyancy driven fluid
motion. A model is suggested and its applicability to previous results obtained
in 3D media is discussed
A synthesis of three decades of hydrological research at Scotty Creek, NWT, Canada
Scotty Creek, Northwest Territories (NWT), Canada, has
been the focus of hydrological research for nearly three decades. Over this
period, field and modelling studies have generated new insights into the
thermal and physical mechanisms governing the flux and storage of water in
the wetland-dominated regions of discontinuous permafrost that characterises
much of the Canadian and circumpolar subarctic. Research at Scotty Creek
has coincided with a period of unprecedented climate warming, permafrost
thaw, and resulting land cover transformations including the expansion of
wetland areas and loss of forests. This paper (1) synthesises field and
modelling studies at Scotty Creek, (2) highlights the key insights of these
studies on the major water flux and storage processes operating within and
between the major land cover types, and (3) provides insights into the rate
and pattern of the permafrost-thaw-induced land cover change and how such
changes will affect the hydrology and water resources of the study region.</p
G.: Generation of Aquifer Heterogeneity Maps using Two Dimensional Spectral Texture Segmentation Techniques
In this paper we present two new texture segmentation algorithms based on local spectrum analysis with the two dimensional S-Transform. The effectiveness of these algorithms is demonstrated both on simple synthetic images, and complicated, real images of glacial sediment deposits. The S-Transform method is robust and is insensitive to changes in light intensity, and moisture variations. The effectiveness of our methods are measured by correlating measured relative grain sizes in the images with actual grain size measurements taken from the sedimentary outcrops. Key Words: image processing texture segmentation aquifer hetergeneity solute transport S-Transfor
Coupled cellular automata for frozen soil processes
Heat and water movement in variably saturated freezing soils is a strongly
coupled phenomenon. The coupling is a result of the effects of sub-zero
temperature on soil water potential, heat carried by water moving under
pressure gradients, and dependency of soil thermal and hydraulic properties
on soil water content. This study presents a
one-dimensional cellular automata (direct solving) model to simulate coupled
heat and water transport with phase change in variably saturated soils. The
model is based on first-order mass and energy conservation principles. The
water and energy fluxes are calculated using first-order empirical forms of
Buckingham–Darcy's law and Fourier's heat law respectively. The
liquid–ice phase change is handled by integrating along an experimentally determined soil
freezing curve (unfrozen water content and temperature relationship)
obviating the use of the apparent heat capacity term. This approach highlights a
further subtle form of coupling in which heat carried by water perturbs
the water content–temperature equilibrium and exchange energy flux is used
to maintain the equilibrium rather than affect the temperature change. The model
is successfully tested against analytical and experimental solutions. Setting
up a highly non-linear coupled soil physics problem with a physically based
approach provides intuitive insights into an otherwise complex phenomenon
Effects of freezing on soil temperature, freezing front propagation and moisture redistribution in peat: laboratory investigations
There are not many studies that report water movement in freezing peat. Soil column studies under controlled laboratory settings can help isolate and understand the effects of different factors controlling freezing of the active layer in organic covered permafrost terrain. In this study, four peat Mesocosms were subjected to temperature gradients by bringing the Mesocosm tops in contact with sub-zero air temperature while maintaining a continuously frozen layer at the bottom (proxy permafrost). Soil water movement towards the freezing front (from warmer to colder regions) was inferred from soil freezing curves, liquid water content time series and from the total water content of frozen core samples collected at the end of freezing cycle. A substantial amount of water, enough to raise the upper surface of frozen saturated soil within 15 cm of the soil surface at the end of freezing period appeared to have moved upwards during freezing. Diffusion under moisture gradients and effects of temperature on soil matric potential, at least in the initial period, appear to drive such movement as seen from analysis of freezing curves. Freezing front (separation front between soil zones containing and free of ice) propagation is controlled by latent heat for a long time during freezing. A simple conceptual model describing freezing of an organic active layer initially resembling a variable moisture landscape is proposed based upon the results of this study. The results of this study will help in understanding, and ultimately forecasting, the hydrologic response of wetland-dominated terrain underlain by discontinuous permafrost
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