Abstract
This paper reports the results of higher F− and HCO3- concentrations and its response to high pH level in a hard rock terrain in Tamil Nadu, India. About 400 groundwater samples from the study area were collected from a period of four different seasons and analysed for F−, HCO3- and other major cations and anions. The key rationale for the higher fluoride and bicarbonate in the study area is the soaring rate of the leaching fluoride-bearing minerals and weathering processes. Fluoride and HCO3- ranges from BDL to 3.30 mgl−1 and 12 to 940 mgl−1, its concentrations are lower for the period of SWM and it increases during POM and reaches to a maximum in PRM. Higher dissolution is observed in the NEM season due to rainfall impact. Spatial distribution and factor score show that the higher concentrations of F− and HCO3- are eminent in the northern and central zone of the study area due to the impact of lithology. The higher values in pCO2 versus HCO3- plot indicate higher residence time which favours more water–rock interactions, which further increase the F− concentrations in groundwater. HCO3- is linearly correlated with F− which indicates that these ions were consequent from the weathering influences. At the same time, poor correlation of F− with pH could possibly be due to the increase of alkalinity follow-on from the swell of bicarbonate level with very low Ca2+ that promotes increase in F−concentration in the groundwater.
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Singaraja, C., Chidambaram, S., Jacob, N., Johnson Babu, G., Selvam, S., Anandhan, P., … Tamizharasan, K. (2018). Origin of high fluoride in groundwater of the Tuticorin district, Tamil Nadu, India. Applied Water Science, 8(2). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13201-018-0694-x
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