A mathematical model for the transport and fate of organic chemicals in unsaturated/saturated soils

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Abstract

A mathematical model, simulating the transport and fate of nonionizable organic compounds in unsaturated/saturated porous media (soils) in a terrestrial microcosm has been developed. Using the principles of water mass, momentum, heat energy and chemical mass balance, the three fields: moisture, temperature, and liquid phase chemical concentration are solved for simultaneously by coupling the soil slab to an environmentally realistic air-soil interface (a dynamic free boundary) conditions and a prescribed height water table. The environmental conditions at the soil surface-air chamber interface are easily changed, via geometric scaling factors, to simulate either an open agricultural field or a landfill type of situation. Illustrative simulation runs examine the effects of differnt soil-chemical characteristics on hydrological and chemical concentration profiles.

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Lindstrom, F. T., & Piver, W. T. (1985). A mathematical model for the transport and fate of organic chemicals in unsaturated/saturated soils. Environmental Health Perspectives, VOL. 60, 11–28. https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.856011

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