Mobilization of colloids in groundwater due to infiltration of water at a coal ash disposal site

We investigated groundwaters in the vicinity of a coal ash site near an electric generating station in the western U.S.A. The purpose of the study was to ascertain why fine particles or colloids appear in some subsurface water samples there. If such fine particles are merely introduced during...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gschwend, Phillip M., Backhus, Debera A., MacFarlane, John K., Page, A. L.
Format: Technical Report
Language:en_US
Published: MIT Energy Lab 2005
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/27210
_version_ 1811090193662345216
author Gschwend, Phillip M.
Backhus, Debera A.
MacFarlane, John K.
Page, A. L.
author_facet Gschwend, Phillip M.
Backhus, Debera A.
MacFarlane, John K.
Page, A. L.
author_sort Gschwend, Phillip M.
collection MIT
description We investigated groundwaters in the vicinity of a coal ash site near an electric generating station in the western U.S.A. The purpose of the study was to ascertain why fine particles or colloids appear in some subsurface water samples there. If such fine particles are merely introduced during bailing or pumping operations which suspend otherwise immobile soil colloids, we should exclude these particulate materials from the water samples before analysis intended to quantify what is moving through the aquifer. However, if the colloids were truly suspended and moving with the groundwater flow in situ, then we should include their contribution to our assessment of the mobile loads. Application of very careful sampling techniques (slow pumping rates, no atmospheric exposure) did not cause the large quantities of colloids observed previously to disappear from well water in which they occurred. Additionally, the same sampling procedures did not cause similar abun- dances of colloids to appear in waters collected from neighboring wells installed and' developed in the same manner and in the same geologic strata. Thus we believe sampling artifacts do not explain the colloids' presence in the groundwater samples. On the other hand, the groundwater chemistry and the nature of the suspended colloids (size, composition) strongly suggest these fine particles were suspended and therefore moving with the groundwater flow. At wells exhibiting large amounts of suspended colloids (- 10-100mg L-), the water was enriched in CO2 and depleted in 02 relative to nearby locations. The colloids were typically between 0.1 and 2 gm in size and were primarily silicates. These results suggest to us that, where infiltrating water is percolating through a site that has been mixed with coal ash, the secondary carbonate minerals in the soils are being dissolved; removal of this cementing carbonate phase may consequently release soil silicate colloids to be carried in the flowing water. Such processes may enhance contaminant transport in groundwater by augmenting the pollutant load moving in the groundwater, and increasing the permeability of the porous medium to pollutant infiltration with waste water and/or rainwater.
first_indexed 2024-09-23T14:37:19Z
format Technical Report
id mit-1721.1/27210
institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology
language en_US
last_indexed 2024-09-23T14:37:19Z
publishDate 2005
publisher MIT Energy Lab
record_format dspace
spelling mit-1721.1/272102019-04-11T09:10:25Z Mobilization of colloids in groundwater due to infiltration of water at a coal ash disposal site Gschwend, Phillip M. Backhus, Debera A. MacFarlane, John K. Page, A. L. We investigated groundwaters in the vicinity of a coal ash site near an electric generating station in the western U.S.A. The purpose of the study was to ascertain why fine particles or colloids appear in some subsurface water samples there. If such fine particles are merely introduced during bailing or pumping operations which suspend otherwise immobile soil colloids, we should exclude these particulate materials from the water samples before analysis intended to quantify what is moving through the aquifer. However, if the colloids were truly suspended and moving with the groundwater flow in situ, then we should include their contribution to our assessment of the mobile loads. Application of very careful sampling techniques (slow pumping rates, no atmospheric exposure) did not cause the large quantities of colloids observed previously to disappear from well water in which they occurred. Additionally, the same sampling procedures did not cause similar abun- dances of colloids to appear in waters collected from neighboring wells installed and' developed in the same manner and in the same geologic strata. Thus we believe sampling artifacts do not explain the colloids' presence in the groundwater samples. On the other hand, the groundwater chemistry and the nature of the suspended colloids (size, composition) strongly suggest these fine particles were suspended and therefore moving with the groundwater flow. At wells exhibiting large amounts of suspended colloids (- 10-100mg L-), the water was enriched in CO2 and depleted in 02 relative to nearby locations. The colloids were typically between 0.1 and 2 gm in size and were primarily silicates. These results suggest to us that, where infiltrating water is percolating through a site that has been mixed with coal ash, the secondary carbonate minerals in the soils are being dissolved; removal of this cementing carbonate phase may consequently release soil silicate colloids to be carried in the flowing water. Such processes may enhance contaminant transport in groundwater by augmenting the pollutant load moving in the groundwater, and increasing the permeability of the porous medium to pollutant infiltration with waste water and/or rainwater. 2005-09-15T13:56:00Z 2005-09-15T13:56:00Z 1988 Technical Report http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/27210 en_US MIT-EL 88-004 1183771 bytes application/pdf application/pdf MIT Energy Lab
spellingShingle Gschwend, Phillip M.
Backhus, Debera A.
MacFarlane, John K.
Page, A. L.
Mobilization of colloids in groundwater due to infiltration of water at a coal ash disposal site
title Mobilization of colloids in groundwater due to infiltration of water at a coal ash disposal site
title_full Mobilization of colloids in groundwater due to infiltration of water at a coal ash disposal site
title_fullStr Mobilization of colloids in groundwater due to infiltration of water at a coal ash disposal site
title_full_unstemmed Mobilization of colloids in groundwater due to infiltration of water at a coal ash disposal site
title_short Mobilization of colloids in groundwater due to infiltration of water at a coal ash disposal site
title_sort mobilization of colloids in groundwater due to infiltration of water at a coal ash disposal site
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/27210
work_keys_str_mv AT gschwendphillipm mobilizationofcolloidsingroundwaterduetoinfiltrationofwateratacoalashdisposalsite
AT backhusdeberaa mobilizationofcolloidsingroundwaterduetoinfiltrationofwateratacoalashdisposalsite
AT macfarlanejohnk mobilizationofcolloidsingroundwaterduetoinfiltrationofwateratacoalashdisposalsite
AT pageal mobilizationofcolloidsingroundwaterduetoinfiltrationofwateratacoalashdisposalsite