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Effect of dissolved CO2 on a shallow groundwater system: a controlled release field experiment

Authors :
Baptiste Dafflon
Jens Birkholzer
Susan S. Hubbard
Liange Zheng
Dennis L. Newell
Yuxin Wu
Peter S. Nico
Robert Trautz
Marco Bianchi
Richard A. Esposito
John D. Pugh
Charuleka Varadharajan
Nicolas Spycher
Source :
Environmental sciencetechnology. 47(1)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Capturing carbon dioxide (CO(2)) emissions from industrial sources and injecting the emissions deep underground in geologic formations is one method being considered to control CO(2) concentrations in the atmosphere. Sequestering CO(2) underground has its own set of environmental risks, including the potential migration of CO(2) out of the storage reservoir and resulting acidification and release of trace constituents in shallow groundwater. A field study involving the controlled release of groundwater containing dissolved CO(2) was initiated to investigate potential groundwater impacts. Dissolution of CO(2) in the groundwater resulted in a sustained and easily detected decrease of ~3 pH units. Several trace constituents, including As and Pb, remained below their respective detections limits and/or at background levels. Other constituents (Ba, Ca, Cr, Sr, Mg, Mn, and Fe) displayed a pulse response, consisting of an initial increase in concentration followed by either a return to background levels or slightly greater than background. This suggests a fast-release mechanism (desorption, exchange, and/or fast dissolution of small finite amounts of metals) concomitant in some cases with a slower release potentially involving different solid phases or mechanisms. Inorganic constituents regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency remained below their respective maximum contaminant levels throughout the experiment.

Details

ISSN :
15205851
Volume :
47
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental sciencetechnology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....59ebe742fc67c9d3ae749844c280a8f7