Dynamics of contaminant flow through porous media containing random adsorbers
Kaj Pettersson, Albin Nordlander, Angela Sasic Kalagasidis, Oskar Modin, Dario Maggiolo

TL;DR
This study investigates how contaminant flow in porous media with random adsorbers like biochar is affected by particle size, adsorption capacity, and flow dynamics through experiments and pore-scale simulations.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical model for biochar adsorption and compares experimental and simulation results to understand contaminant breakthrough behavior.
Findings
Uniform particle sizes improve contaminant breakthrough reduction.
Higher adsorption capacity and rates enhance biochar performance.
Channeling effects increase with dissimilar particle sizes, reducing efficiency.
Abstract
Many porous media are mixtures of inert and reactive materials, manifesting spatio-chemical heterogeneity. We study the evolution of scalar transport in a chemically heterogeneous material that mimics a green roof soil substrate, fractionally composed of inert and reactive adsorbing particles. These adsorbing particles are equivalent to biochar within a real soil substrate. The scalar transport evolution is determined using experiments and simulations calibrated from experimental data. Experiment 1 is used to determine the equilibrium capacity and adsorption rate of two biochar types when immersed in a methylene blue solution. Breakthrough curves of a packed bed of glass beads with randomly interspersed biochar are determined in experiment 2. Simulations are then run to investigate the solute transport and adsorption dynamics at the pore-scale. An analytical model is proposed to capture…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Theoretical and Applied Studies in Material Sciences and Geometry
