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Electrical characterization of non‐Fickian transport in groundwater and hyporheic systems

January 1, 2008

Recent work indicates that processes controlling solute mass transfer between mobile and less mobile domains in porous media may be quantified by combining electrical geophysical methods and electrically conductive tracers. Whereas direct geochemical measurements of solute preferentially sample the mobile domain, electrical geophysical methods are sensitive to changes in bulk electrical conductivity (bulk EC) and therefore sample EC in both the mobile and immobile domains. Consequently, the conductivity difference between direct geochemical samples and remotely sensed electrical geophysical measurements may provide an indication of mass transfer rates and mobile and immobile porosities in situ. Here we present (1) an overview of a theoretical framework for determining parameters controlling mass transfer with electrical resistivity in situ; (2) a review of a case study estimating mass transfer processes in a pilot‐scale aquifer storage recovery test; and (3) an example application of this method for estimating mass transfer in watershed settings between streams and the hyporheic corridor. We demonstrate that numerical simulations of electrical resistivity studies of the stream/hyporheic boundary can help constrain volumes and rates of mobile‐immobile mass transfer. We conclude with directions for future research applying electrical geophysics to understand field‐scale transport in aquifer and fluvial systems subject to rate‐limited mass transfer.

Publication Year 2008
Title Electrical characterization of non‐Fickian transport in groundwater and hyporheic systems
DOI 10.1029/2008WR007048
Authors Kamini Singha, Adam Pidlisecky, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Michael N. Gooseff
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Water Resources Research
Index ID 70035300
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization OGW Branch of Geophysics; Office of Ground Water; Toxic Substances Hydrology Program