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Impacts of local dispersion and first-order decay on solute transport in randomly heterogeneous porous media
Authors:Dongxiao Zhang
Institution:(1) 6020 Academy NE, Suite 100, Daniel B. Stephens & Associates, Inc., 87109 Albuquerque, NM, USA
Abstract:Stochastic subsurface transport theories either disregard local dispersion or take it to be constant. We offer an alternative Eulerian-Lagrangian formalism to account for both local dispersion and first-order mass removal (due to radioactive decay or biodegradation). It rests on a decomposition of the velocityv into a field-scale componentv ohgr, which is defined on the scale of measurement supportohgr, and a zero mean sub-field-scale componentv s , which fluctuates randomly on scales smaller thanohgr. Without loss of generality, we work formally with unconditional statistics ofv s and conditional statistics ofv ohgr. We then require that, within this (or other selected) working framework,v s andv ohgr be mutually uncorrelated. This holds whenever the correlation scale ofv ohgr is large in comparison to that ofv s . The formalism leads to an integro-differential equation for the conditional mean total concentration langcrangohgr which includes two dispersion terms, one field-scale and one sub-field-scale. It also leads to explicit expressions for conditional second moments of concentration langcprimecprimerangohgr. We solve the former, and evaluate the latter, for mildly fluctuatingv ohgr by means of an analytical-numerical method developed earlier by Zhang and Neuman. We present results in two-dimensional flow fields of unconditional (prior) mean uniformv ohgr. These show that the relative effect of local dispersion on first and second moments of concentration dies out locally as the corresponding dispersion tensor tends to zero. The effect also diminishes with time and source size. Our results thus do not support claims in the literature that local dispersion must always be accounted for, no matter how small it is. First-order decay reduces dispersion. This effect increases with time. However, these concentration moments langcrangohgr and langcprimecprimerangohgr of total concentrationc, which are associated with the scale belowohgr, cannot be used to estimate the field-scale concentrationc ohgr directly. To do so, a spatial average over the field measurement scaleohgr is needed. Nevertheless, our numerical results show that differences between the ensemble moments ofc ohgr and those ofc are negligible, especially for nonpoint sources, because the ensemble moments ofc are already smooth enough.
Keywords:stochastic analysis  conditional probability  solute transport  local dispersion  first-order decay  heterogeneous porous media
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