Field study on colloid transport using fluorescent microspheres

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Abstract

Understanding colloid movement through the vadose zone is important, because colloids may facilitate transport of some less mobile contaminants. Experimental evidence of colloid transport in the vadose zone, especially at the field scale, is rare. We developed and tested a method to detect and quantify local concentrations of fluorescent microspheres (MS) with a diameter of 1 μm in unsaturated soil based on fluorescent microscopy. The detection limit was 400 × 106 MS kg-1 field-moist soil for an automated counting method, and 20 × 103 MS kg-1 for manual counting. To test the method in the field, we applied a 40-mm pulse with an input concentration of 14.6 × 109 MS litre-1 on two plots during 6 hours, together with bromide (Br-) and the food dye Brilliant Blue (BB). The concentrations of MS were determined on horizontal cross-sections by a randomly distributed sampling scheme, either directly after application or 90 days after application and a rainfall of 100 mm. Mass recoveries for the MS of 85 and 65% were acceptable in view of the field conditions. Even after infiltration of particle-free water, the largest MS concentrations were measured at the soil's surface, which pointed at physical retention mechanisms. An additional selective sampling of hydrologically active preferential flow pathways, guided by the dye infiltration patterns, revealed that the MS were transported to similar depths as BB, that is 0.80 m directly after irrigation and 1.7 m after 90 days. This implies that also a small fraction of the particulate tracers was rapidly transported to larger depths, regardless of their physico-chemical properties. © 2007 British Society of Soil Science.

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Burkhardt, M., Kasteel, R., Vanderborght, J., & Vereecken, H. (2008). Field study on colloid transport using fluorescent microspheres. European Journal of Soil Science, 59(1), 82–93. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2389.2007.00989.x

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