| Literature DB >> 11291482 |
R Schumer1, D A Benson, M M Meerschaert, S W Wheatcraft.
Abstract
A fractional advection-dispersion equation (ADE) is a generalization of the classical ADE in which the second-order derivative is replaced with a fractional-order derivative. In contrast to the classical ADE, the fractional ADE has solutions that resemble the highly skewed and heavy-tailed breakthrough curves observed in field and laboratory studies. These solutions, known as alpha-stable distributions, are the result of a generalized central limit theorem which describes the behavior of sums of finite or infinite-variance random variables. We use this limit theorem in a model which sums the length of particle jumps during their random walk through a heterogeneous porous medium. If the length of solute particle jumps is not constrained to a representative elementary volume (REV), dispersive flux is proportional to a fractional derivative. The nature of fractional derivatives is readily visualized and their parameters are based on physical properties that are measurable. When a fractional Fick's law replaces the classical Fick's law in an Eulerian evaluation of solute transport in a porous medium, the result is a fractional ADE. Fractional ADEs are ergodic equations since they occur when a generalized central limit theorem is employed.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11291482 DOI: 10.1016/s0169-7722(00)00170-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Contam Hydrol ISSN: 0169-7722 Impact factor: 3.188