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Physical and Numerical Simulation of Geotechnical Engineering 16th Issue, Sep. 2014 Numerical Simulation Analysis of the Effect of Microbiological Degradation on Organic Contaminant Distribution in Groundwater ZHAO Ying1, 2, LIANG Bing1, XUE Qiang2 1. Department of Mechanics and Engineering Sciences, Liaoning Technical University, Fuxin 123000, P.R.China 2. Institute of Rock and Soil Mechanics, The Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430071, P.R.China ABSTRACT: Considering convection, dispersion and adsorption-desorption, the kinetic model of the transportation and transformation of organic contaminant, electrical accepter and bacteria in the groundwater system was established by using double Monod microbiological degradation based on the principle of mass conservation. Taking benzene and dissolved oxygen for example, the numerical simulation analysis of contaminant and bacteria in the groundwater system was performed, and the result shows that the bacteria concentration accumulates in the zone which the concentrations of contaminant and dissolved oxygen are both relatively higher; the concentrations of bacteria in aqueous phase and soil phase increase first and then reduce along the main direction of contaminant transportation; the maximum value of bacteria concentration appears in the upstream zone near the pollution source. KEYWORDS: Groundwater, Organic contaminant, Microbiological degradation, Kinetic model, Numerical simulation 1 INTRODUCTION 2 MODEL DESCRIPTIONS With the fast development of economy and the rapid increase of population, the quantity of sewage in industry, agriculture and daily life is gradually increasing. For the requirement of constructing and living, the organic contaminants, such as pesticide, chemical fertilizer and landfill leach ate, are leaked out to environment. The organic contamination events of underground water were repeatedly reported, and it is intimidating people’s health and safety. Underground water system is a hidden environment, and the transportation and transformation of contaminant in it is very hard to known. With the development of computer science and numerical calculation method, the numerical simulation, with which the news of contaminant transportation and transformation can be forecasted, is becoming to a significant method. Recently, many researchers developed many researches, and established a series of mathematical models. But most of them emphasize particularly on the description of physical transport process, the study on the microbiological degradation was not deep. In this paper, based on the environmental microbiology, the seepage mechanics and the theory of solute transport, the model for describing the interaction, transportation and transformation of organic contaminant, electron acceptor (oxygen) and bacteria in underground water was established by using double-Monod microbiological degradation model. The numerical simulation analysis was performed taking benzene for example. It provides theory basis for preventing and administering contamination of underground water. 2.1 Model of underground water flow © ST. PLUM-BLOSSOM PRESS PTY LTD The governing equation for underground water flow can be written as (Freeze and Cherry, 1979): Ss h h Kii t xi xi (1) Where t is time [T], xi are Cartesian coordinates [L], h is the hydraulic head [L], Kij is the hydraulic conductivity tensor [LT-1], Ss is the coefficient of specific storativity [L-1]. Based on the Darcy’s Law the Darcy velocity is: qi Kij h xi (2) 2.2 Model of solute transport and biodegradation processes The kinetic models that include convection, dispersion, sorption, nonlinear biodegradation (double-Monod kinetics), biomass growth, decay, and electron acceptor availability are used for this study. For organic contaminant the governing model can be written as: C SC C vi C Dij t n t xi x j xi (3) C O m X X qC n K C C KO O Where C , O and X are the aqueous phase concentrations of contaminant, electron acceptor (oxygen) Numerical Simulation Analysis of the Effect of Microbiological Degradation on Organic Contaminant Distribution in Groundwater DOI:10.5503/J.PNSGE.2014.16.012 and bacterial cell respectively [ML-3]; SC and X are the solid-phase concentrations of contaminant and bacterial cell respectively [MM-1]; KC is the half saturation coefficient for the contaminant [ML-3]; n is the porosity of soil; is bulk density of the soil [ML-3]; conditions of underground water flow include all points within the considered domain , that is: h0 h0 ( x, y , z,0) (8 ) Three boundary conditions are commonly used in the solution of solute transport problems. They are called Dirichlet, Nermann and Cauchy boundary condition respectively. Dirichlet boundary condition: -1 vi is the average pore fluid velocity [LT ]; Dij is the hydrodynamic dispersion coefficient [L2T-1]; K O is the half saturation coefficient for oxygen [ML-3], and m is the contaminant utilization rate [T-1]. For the electron acceptor in aqueous phase, the governing model can be similarly written as: h( x, y, z, t ) h h1 ( x, y, z, t ) , o n 1h (9) 1 Nermann boundary condition: O SO O viO Dij t n t xi x j xi (4) C O YO / C m X X qO n KC C KO O K h( x, y, z, t ) q1 ( x, y, z, t ) , on h2 n 1h (10) Cauchy boundary condition: Where YO / C is the stoichiometric yield coefficient (oxygen used per unit amount of contaminant utilized); qO is the source or sink of electron acceptor [ML-3]. h( x, y, z, t ) f1h f 2 , o n 3h n 1h Based on the double Monod theory and considering the transport, attachment, detachment, growth and decay, the governing model of bacteria in aqueous phase and soilid phase can be written as: For solute transport model the initial condition can be written as: A0 A( x, y, z,0) , A C, O, SC , SO , X , X in C (12) And the boundary conditions are: Dirichlet boundary condition: C O X X vi X YX / C m X Dij t xi x j xi K C C K O O (5) K X K att X det Ke X n A( x, y, z, t ) h A1 ( x, y, z, t ) A= 1 C , O , S C , SO , X , C O K att nX X YX / C m X Kdet X K e X (6) t K C C KO O X on 1C (13) Nermann boundary condition: n D A qnA ( x, y , z, t ) Where YX / C and YX / C are the stoichiometric yield A =C ,O , X on C2 (14) coefficients (biomass produced per unit amount of electron donor utilized) of aqueous phase and solid-phase respectively; K att is the bacterial attachment coefficient Cauchy boundary condition: n vA D A q A ( x, y , z, t ) [T-1], K det is the bacterial detachment coefficient [T -1], A = C , O , X on C3 (15) and K e is the endogenous cell death or decay coefficient [T-1]. Assuming an equilibrium sorption for contaminant and electron acceptor, the sorption model can be written as: SC S =kC ( K SC C SC ) , O =kO ( K sOO SO ) t t (11) 3 SIMULATION RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Benzene is common used chemical material. Its uncontrolled release to the environment will cause the contaminant to the soil and underground water. So, taking the benzene for example, the transport and attenuation of organic pollutants in underground water was studied. The study area is 2D plane with X 500m and Y 300m . The pollution source is in the domain X =100m and Y =100m-200m, with the concentration of 650 mg L . The parameter was showed in Table 1, and the simulation results were plotted in Figure 1-8. (7) Where kC and kO are the first order adsorption/ desorption rate constant of contaminant and electron acceptor [T-1]; K SC and K SO are the distribution coefficient of contaminant and electron acceptor between aqueous phase and soil phase [L3M-1]. 2.3 Initial and boundary condition To solve a particular problem, the governing partial differential equation has to be supplemented by appropriate initial and boundary condition. Initial 54 Physical and Numerical Simulation of Geotechnical Engineering 16th Issue, Sep. 2014 Table 1 The values of parameters in the model Parameters Kij / m d -1 Parameters Values 2 .0 m / d 0.15 n /% 0.40 YO / C 3.08 1.85 YX / C 0.001 5 vy / m d-1 0.082 Katt / d -1 -1 L / m d -1 0.085 K det / d 0.042 5 K e / d -1 0.001 5 KC / mg L K O / mg L 0 .125 kde / d -1 0.075 300 250 200 200 Y/m 150 150 100 100 50 50 50 0 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 0 50 X/m 300 250 250 200 200 Y/m Y/m Figure 2 The distribution of dissolved oxygen concentration after 1 year (mg/L) 300 150 150 100 100 50 50 0 50 0 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 0 50 Figure 4 The distribution of bacteria concentration in soil phase after 1 year (10-10mg/L) 300 300 250 250 200 200 Y/m Y/m Figure 3 The distribution of bacteria concentration in aqueous phase after 1 year (10-5mg/L) 150 100 100 50 50 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 X/m X/m 150 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 X/m Figure 1 The distribution of pollution concentration after 1 year (mg/L) 0 1.0 0 .115 250 0 85.0 T / m2 d-1 300 0 -1 / g cm -3 2 Y/m Values 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 X/m X/m Figure 5 The distribution of pollution concentration after 2 years (mg/L) Figure 6 The distribution of dissolved oxygen concentration after 2 years (mg/L) 55 Numerical Simulation Analysis of the Effect of Microbiological Degradation on Organic Contaminant Distribution in Groundwater DOI:10.5503/J.PNSGE.2014.16.012 300 300 250 250 200 150 Y/m Y/m 200 150 100 100 50 50 0 0 50 0 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 X/m X/m Figure 7 The distribution of bacteria concentration in aqueous phase after 2 years (10-5mg/L) The results plotted in Figure 1-8 show that with the increasing of time, the contaminant is gradually filtered from the source in the upper boundary to downstream with the flow of underground water and diffused to the bilateral is, making the contaminated area an ellipse. The oxygen concentration presents a decreasing trend with the contaminant increasing. The bacterial concentration is restricted both by contaminant concentration and oxygen concentration, so the change law is relatively complex. In the main transport direction ( Y 150m , X 100m ), the bacterial concentrations both in the water and the soil present a trend that increasing firstly and then decrease, the bacteria aggregates in the place where both the oxygen concentration and contaminant concentration are high. Near the pollution source, although the contaminant concentration is high and can offer the necessary nutrient for metabolism of bacteria, the bacterial concentration is very low, because of the absence of oxygen. The bacteria aggregate on the left of the pollution source, because the dispersion of pollution makes the sufficient nourishment, and the flow of water takes the high concentration of oxygen. Figure 8 The distribution of bacteria concentration in soil phase after 2 years (10-10mg/L) So, it can be concluded that the dissolved oxygen is important for contaminant degradation and bacterium growing, when modeling the organic contaminant transportation and transformation in underground water, the oxygen must be considered. ACKNOWLEDGMENT This research was supported with funding from National Natural Science Foundation of China (50874102) and a grant from Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province for Distinguished Young Scholars (2007ABB039) and a grant from the Key Technologies Programs of Hubei Province (2008AC008) and Open Fund of State Key Laboratory of Geohazard Prevention and Geoenvirnment Protection (GZ2006-03) and Science and Technique Foundation from Municipal Manage Agency of Wuhan. This research was supported with funding from National Natural Science Foundation of China (50574048). REFERENCES 4 CONCLUSIONS [1]. Markus Bause, Willi Merz. 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Two-dimensional The dynamic models for describing the interaction, transportation and transformation of organic contaminant, oxygen and bacteria in underground water were established by using double-Monod degradation model. The numerical simulation analysis was performed taking benzene for example. The numerical simulation results show that: (1) The bacterium growing is restricted both by contaminant and oxygen. The bacteria aggregate in the zone which the concentrations of contaminant and dissolved oxygen are both relatively higher; (2) The concentrations of bacteria in aqueous phase and soil phase increase first and then reduce along the main direction of contaminant transportation; (3) The maximum value of bacteria concentration appears in the upstream zone near the pollution source. 56 Physical and Numerical Simulation of Geotechnical Engineering 16th Issue, Sep. 2014 Concentration Distribution for Mixing-controlled Bio-reactive Transport in Steady State [J]. 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