Meshfree models for simulation of reactive transport in groundwater systems

Author(s):  
Aatish Anshuman ◽  
t i Eldho

<p>Groundwater is the largest source for freshwater which plays an important role in the hydrological cycle. The pollution of groundwater is on the rise due to various natural and anthropogenic sources such as landfills, agricultural lands, and underground waste storage facilities etc. These pollutants can be subjected to reactions depending on the contaminant type and the subsurface environment along with advection and dispersion processes.  As groundwater is used in various human activities such as drinking, agriculture and industrial activities, it is essential to track the contaminants in groundwater for assessing possible environmental impacts. The complex phenomena of flow and contaminant transport are represented by partial differential equations (PDEs) which are solved numerically throughout the problem domain. Although Finite Difference method (FDM) and Finite Element Method (FEM) based models are conventionally used for these simulations, these methods suffer from certain instabilities due to the presence of mesh/grid, for example, numerical dispersion and artificial oscillation for advection and reaction dominant problems. Moreover, these methods are not suitable for adaptive analysis which requires meshing and re-meshing in each simulation making the problem highly computationally expensive. Here, we present a strong form meshfree method named Radial Point Collocation Method (RPCM) for modelling flow and transport in groundwater. In contrast to mesh-based methods, the problem domain is discretised using only nodes in the proposed method. Moreover, unlike the mesh-based methods, it produces stable solutions for advection and reaction dominant problems without using special techniques such as up-winding, adaptive re-meshing or, operator splitting. The performance of the model is tested against analytical solutions, FDM and FEM based models for different reactive transport problems in groundwater involving adsorption, decay, multi-species decay network and biodegradation.</p>

Author(s):  
Reza Alebrahim ◽  
Pawel Packo ◽  
Mirco Zaccariotto ◽  
Ugo Galvanetto

In this study, methods to mitigate anomalous wave propagation in 2-D Bond-Based Peridynamics (PD) are presented. Similarly to what happens in classical non-local models, an irregular wave transmission phenomenon occurs at high frequencies. This feature of the dynamic performance of PD, limits its potential applications. A minimization method based on the weighted residual point collocation is introduced to substantially extend the frequency range of wave motion modeling. The optimization problem, developed through inverse analysis, is set up by comparing exact and numerical dispersion curves and minimizing the error in the frequency-wavenumber domain. A significant improvement in the wave propagation simulation using Bond-Based PD is observed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 310-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Gamazo ◽  
L. J. Slooten ◽  
J. Carrera ◽  
M. W. Saaltink ◽  
S. Bea ◽  
...  

Reactive transport modeling involves solving several nonlinear coupled phenomena, among them, the flow of fluid phases, the transport of chemical species and energy, and chemical reactions. There are different ways to consider this coupling that might be more or less suitable depending on the nature of the problem to be solved. In this paper we acknowledge the importance of flexibility on reactive transport codes and how object-oriented programming can facilitate this feature. We present PROOST, an object-oriented code that allows solving reactive transport problems considering different coupling approaches. The code main classes and their interactions are presented. PROOST performance is illustrated by the resolution of a multiphase reactive transport problem where geochemistry affects hydrodynamic processes.


2012 ◽  
Vol 129-130 ◽  
pp. 2-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gautham P. Jeppu ◽  
T. Prabhakar Clement ◽  
Mark O. Barnett ◽  
Kang-Kun Lee

2008 ◽  
Vol 193 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 299-308 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marwan Fahs ◽  
Jérôme Carrayrou ◽  
Anis Younes ◽  
Philippe Ackerer

2005 ◽  
Vol 41 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. De Simoni ◽  
J. Carrera ◽  
X. Sánchez-Vila ◽  
A. Guadagnini

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