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Environmental Modelling & Software
Volume 23, Issue 5, May 2008, Pages 563-568
 
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doi:10.1016/j.envsoft.2007.08.003    How to Cite or Link Using DOI (Opens New Window)
Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.

A model to evaluate a soil's bulk solid phase resistance to extraction analysis

Aaron A. Jenningsa, Corresponding Author Contact Information, E-mail The Corresponding Author and Jun Mab, E-mail The Corresponding Author

aDepartment of Civil Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44106-7201, USA bConestoga-Rovers & Associates, Inc, Plainville, CT 06119, USA

Received 10 August 2007; 
accepted 11 August 2007. 
Available online 27 September 2007.

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Abstract

Measurements of soil contamination are essential to environmental models that function at many scales. For old contamination soils, contamination measurements can be significant sources of error. Often, soils that have been contaminated for a long time sequester contaminants deep within aggregates where they are difficult to measure and difficult to remove. Heavy metal sequestering is very common in the soils of Cleveland, Ohio, but may be found in many of the world's industrial areas. Sequestered contamination can be difficult to measure with conventional laboratory extractions because contact times may not be sufficient to allow removal of this fraction of the contamination. This manuscript presents a model (SAM&BSD) designed to examine the degree to which liquid phase diffusion within the internal pore structure of soil aggregates and/or solid state diffusion within aggregates resist the release of contaminants during laboratory extractions. The results may be used to improve the accuracy of soil contamination measurements, or to assess the reliability of values measured by standard extraction techniques. A companion model (AGGANCi) may be used to determine if the extraction acidity and duration are sufficient to overcome the internal acid neutralization capacity of the soil and allow transport to be dominated by diffusion. The goal of both analysis tools is to improve the quality of data used in environmental models that address the impacts of soil contamination.

Keywords: Soil contamination; Diffusive transport; Laboratory soil analysis; Sequestering; Soil data reliability

Software availability

Name
SAM&BSD – Soil Aggregate Micropore & Bulk Solid Diffusion
Developer
Aaron A. Jennings and Jun Ma
Contact address
Department of Civil Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106-7201, USA
First available
2005
Hardware
Microsoft Windows (98 or later) compatible PC
Software
Microsoft Excel
Language
Microsoft Excel Spreadsheet
Program Size
1.4 MB (larger if additional summation terms are added)
Availability
available on CD or as e-mail attachment
Cost
free

Article Outline

Nomenclature
1. Introduction
2. Model development
2.1. Formulation assumptions
2.2. Model derivation
2.3. Model precision and accuracy
2.4. Example SAM&BSD application 1
2.5. Example SAM&BSD application 2
3. Summary and conclusion
Acknowledgements
References



 
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