Fully-integrated modelling of surface and subsurface water flow and solute transport: Model overview and application

Author(s):  
Edward A. Sudicky ◽  
Joel E. Vanderkwaak ◽  
Jon P. Jones ◽  
Jon P. Keizer ◽  
Robert G. Mclaren ◽  
...  
Biologia ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jirka Šimůnek ◽  
Diederik Jacques ◽  
Navin Twarakavi ◽  
Martinus Genuchten

AbstractA large number of modifications or special modules of the HYDRUS software packages have been developed during the past several years to evaluate the effects of a range of biohydrological processes on subsurface water flow and the transport of various chemicals and contaminants. The objective of this manuscript is to briefly review the different modules that were included, and to present various applications illustrating the effects of biological processes on water flow and solute transport and reactions in variably-saturated media.


2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (22) ◽  
pp. 4113-4124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanko Ružičić ◽  
Marta Mileusnić ◽  
Kristijan Posavec ◽  
Zoran Nakić ◽  
Goran Durn ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (4) ◽  
pp. 682-695 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hassan Ojaghlou ◽  
Teymour Sohrabi ◽  
Fariborz Abbasi ◽  
Hamidreza Javani

2019 ◽  
pp. 295-305
Author(s):  
Johann Fellner ◽  
Gernot Döberl ◽  
Paul H Brunner

The environmental impacts of deposited MSW are mainly associated with the emissionsof leachate and biogas. While biogas emissions will become negligible within decades,leachate emissions will stay on an environmental incompatible level for hundreds ofyears, calculated under simplified assumptions. The generation of leachate from MSWlandfills is determined by the waste input, the climatic conditions and the landfillconstruction and operation. In this paper the impacts of different construction (landfillcover) and operation strategies (recirculation or flushing) on the duration of landfillaftercare (in particular leachate treatment) are evaluated. Therefore a mathematical waterflow and solute transport model which has been successfully calibrated at full scalelandfills is used. The results indicate that the stabilization process of MSW landfills ismostly determined by the internal flow conditions and that operation strategies have lessimpact. Only the warranty of "homogeneous" water flow allows sufficient operation ofstrategies for accelerated stabilization ofMSW landfills.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Sternagel ◽  
Ralf Loritz ◽  
Wolfgang Wilcke ◽  
Erwin Zehe

<p>Recently, we proposed an alternative model concept to represent rainfall-driven soil water dynamics and especially preferential water flow and solute transport in the vadose zone. Our LAST-Model is based on a Lagrangian perspective on the movement of water particles (Zehe and Jackisch, 2016) carrying solute masses through the subsurface which is separated into a soil matrix domain and a preferential flow domain (Sternagel et al., 2019). The preferential flow domain relies on observable field data like the average number of macropores of a given diameter, their hydraulic properties and their vertical length distribution. These data may either be derived from field observations or by inverse modelling using tracer data. Parameterization of the soil matrix domain requires soil hydraulic functions which determine the parameters of the water particle movement and particularly the distribution of flow velocities in different pores sizes. Infiltration into the matrix and the macropores depends on their respective moisture state and subsequently macropores are gradually filled. Macropores and matrix interact through diffusive mixing of water and solutes between the two flow domains which again depends on their water content and matric potential at the considered depths.</p><p>The LAST-Model was evaluated using tracer profiles and macropore data obtained at four different study sites in the Weiherbach catchment in south Germany and additionally compared against simulations using HYDRUS 1-D as benchmark model. The results generally corroborated the feasibility of the model concept and particularly the implemented representation of macropore flow and macropore-matrix exchange. We thus concluded that the LAST-Model approach provides a useful and alternative framework for simulating rainfall-driven soil water and solute dynamics and fingerprints of preferential flow.</p><p>This study presents an extension of the model allowing for the simulation of reactive solute transport. Transformation kinetics are considered by transferring mass from the parent to the child components in each water particle according to the corresponding reaction rates, which is limited by the compound solubility. A retardation coefficient is not helpful in the particle-based framework, as the solute mass is carried by the water particles and travels thus by default at the same velocity. Ad- and desorption are explicit represented through transfer of dissolved mass from the water particles at a given depth to surrounding adsorption sites of the soil solid phase and vice versa. This may either operate under rate-limited or non-limited conditions. Adsorbed solute masses will be considered to be degraded following first-order reaction kinetics. The retardation process delays the solute displacement and enables a suitable time scale for the degradation process, which must be smaller than the time scale for the re-mobilization of the solutes. The proposed extension will be benchmarked against observations of pesticide transport in soil profiles and at tile-drained field sites.</p><p> </p><p>Zehe, E., Jackisch, C.: A Lagrangian model for soil water dynamics during rainfall-driven conditions, Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci., 20, 3511–3526, https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-20-3511-2016, 2016.</p><p> </p><p>Sternagel, A., Loritz, R., Wilcke, W., and Zehe, E.: Simulating preferential soil water flow and tracer transport using the Lagrangian Soil Water and Solute Transport Model, Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci., 23, 4249–4267, https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-23-4249-2019, 2019.</p>


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