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Direct Experimental Evidence of Non-first Order Degradation Kinetics and Sorption-Induced Isotopic Fractionation in a Mesoscale Aquifer : 13C/12C Analysis of a Transient Toluene Pulse

Authors :
Olaf A. Cirpka
Christian Griebler
Shiran Qiu
Rainer U. Meckenstock
Peter S.K. Knappett
Martin Elsner
Dominik Eckert
Piotr Maloszewski
Marko Huenniger
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The injection of a mixed toluene and D2O (conservative tracer) pulse into a pristine mesoscale aquifer enabled a first direct experimental comparison of contaminant-specific isotopic fractionation from sorption versus biodegradation and transverse dispersion on a relevant scale. Water samples were taken from two vertically resolved sampling ports at 4.2 m distance. Analysis of deuterium and toluene concentrations allowed quantifying the extent of sorption (R = 1.25) and biodegradation (37% and 44% of initial toluene at the two sampling ports). Sorption and biodegradation were found to directly affect toluene (13)C/(12)C breakthrough curves. In particular, isotope trends demonstrated that biodegradation underwent Michaelis-Menten kinetics rather than first-order kinetics. Carbon isotope enrichment factors obtained from an optimized reactive transport model (Eckert et al., this issue) including a possible isotope fractionation of transverse dispersion were ε(equ)(sorption) = -0.31 ‰, ε(kin)(transverse-dispersion) = -0.82 ‰, and ε(kin)(biodegradation) = -2.15 ‰. Extrapolation of our results to the scenario of a continuous injection predicted that (i) the bias in isotope fractionation from sorption, but not transverse dispersion, may be avoided when the plume reaches steady-state; and (ii) the relevance from both processes is expected to decrease at longer flow distances when isotope fractionation of degradation increasingly dominates.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c1e9ae6db3a5171d5223840da38920a7