Literature DB >> 30381834

A Critical Analysis of Transverse Dispersivity Field Data.

Alraune Zech1, Sabine Attinger1,2, Alberto Bellin3, Vladimir Cvetkovic4, Peter Dietrich1,5, Aldo Fiori6, Georg Teutsch1, Gedeon Dagan.   

Abstract

Transverse dispersion, or tracer spreading orthogonal to the mean flow direction, which is relevant e.g, for quantifying bio-degradation of contaminant plumes or mixing of reactive solutes, has been studied in the literature less than the longitudinal one. Inferring transverse dispersion coefficients from field experiments is a difficult and error-prone task, requiring a spatial resolution of solute plumes which is not easily achievable in applications. In absence of field data, it is a questionable common practice to set transverse dispersivities as a fraction of the longitudinal one, with the ratio 1/10 being the most prevalent. We collected estimates of field-scale transverse dispersivities from existing publications and explored possible scale relationships as guidance criteria for applications. Our investigation showed that a large number of estimates available in the literature are of low reliability and should be discarded from further analysis. The remaining reliable estimates are formation-specific, span three orders of magnitude and do not show any clear scale-dependence on the plume traveled distance. The ratios with the longitudinal dispersivity are also site specific and vary widely. The reliability of transverse dispersivities depends significantly on the type of field experiment and method of data analysis. In applications where transverse dispersion plays a significant role, inference of transverse dispersivities should be part of site characterization with the transverse dispersivity estimated as an independent parameter rather than related heuristically to longitudinal dispersivity.
© 2018, National Ground Water Association.

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30381834     DOI: 10.1111/gwat.12838

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ground Water        ISSN: 0017-467X            Impact factor:   2.671


  1 in total

1.  A Comparison of Six Transport Models of the MADE-1 Experiment Implemented With Different Types of Hydraulic Data.

Authors:  Alraune Zech; Sabine Attinger; Alberto Bellin; Vladimir Cvetkovic; Gedeon Dagan; Marco Dentz; Peter Dietrich; Aldo Fiori; Georg Teutsch
Journal:  Water Resour Res       Date:  2021-05-26       Impact factor: 5.240

  1 in total

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