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a Dep. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996-1410
b 1463 Oxford Place, Cookeville, TN 38506
c Institute for Hydraulics and Rural Water Management, BOKU, Muthgasse 18, A-1190 Vienna, Austria
d Dep. of Agronomy and Soils, Auburn Univ., Auburn, AL 36849-5412
* Corresponding author (eperfect{at}utk.edu).
Received 19 January 2004.
Dense nonaqueous phase liquids (DNAPLs) are important subsurface contaminants. Information is lacking on DNAPL behavior in heterogeneous porous media such as weathered rock (saprolite). We measured airwater and Fluorinert (a nontoxic DNAPL surrogate; 3M, St. Paul, MN)water capillary pressuresaturation relations,
w(hc), close to saturation on an 18-cm-long by 10-cm-diameter undisturbed column of interbedded sandstone and clayshale saprolite. The Campbell empirical model was fitted to both
w(hc) relations. The resulting best-fit parameters were 19.54 and 30.10 cm of H2O for the displacement capillary pressure head (h0) and 0.029 and 0.045 for the pore-size distribution index (1/b), for the airwater and Fluorinertwater data, respectively. Corresponding model parameters corrected for the hydrostatic fluid distribution within the column were 14.08 and 15.96 cm of H2O for h0, and 0.026 and 0.034 for 1/b. The correction procedure had a large effect on the Fluorinertwater
w(hc) relation and relatively little impact on the airwater
w(hc) relation. Parameters from the airwater relations were used to predict Fluorinertwater
w(hc) relations using the expression: (h0)2 = (
2/
1)(h0)1, where (h0)1, (h0)2 and
1,
2 are the capillary displacement pressure heads and interfacial tensions with water for air and Fluorinert, respectively. These analyses showed that direct measurements of the Fluorinertwater
w(hc) relation need to be corrected for column height. The corrected Fluorinertwater
w(hc) relation was accurately predicted (R2
0.99) by both the fitted and corrected (h0)1 values. Thus, the error in prediction introduced by not considering column height or contact angle effects was relatively small. Our results show that scaled airwater
w(hc) relations can be used to predict DNAPL intrusion into water-saturated saprolite at a physical point.
Abbreviations: DNAPL, dense nonaqueous phase liquid SWSA, Solid Waste Storage Area
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