Reactive particle-tracking solutions to a benchmark problem on heavy metal cycling in lake sediments
Geochemical systems are known to exhibit highly variable spatiotemporal behavior. This may be observed both in non-smooth concentration curves in space for a single sampling time and also in variability between samples taken from the same location at different times. However, most models that are de...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of contaminant hydrology 2020-10, Vol.234 (C), p.103642-103642, Article 103642 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Geochemical systems are known to exhibit highly variable spatiotemporal behavior. This may be observed both in non-smooth concentration curves in space for a single sampling time and also in variability between samples taken from the same location at different times. However, most models that are designed to simulate these systems provide only single-solution smooth curves and fail to capture the noise and variability seen in the data. We apply a recently developed reactive particle-tracking method to a system that displays highly complex geochemical behavior. When the method is made to most closely resemble a corresponding Eulerian method, in its unperturbed form, we see near-exact match between solutions of the two models. More importantly, we consider two approaches for perturbing the model and find that the spatially-perturbed condition is able to capture a greater degree of the variability present in the data. This method of perturbation is a task to which particle methods are uniquely suited and Eulerian models are not well-suited. Additionally, because of the nature of the algorithm, noisy spatial gradients can be highly resolved by a large number of mobile particles, and this incurs negligible computational cost, as compared to expensive chemistry calculations.
•We apply a particle-tracking (PT) model to a complex geochemical system involving heavy metals cycling in lake sediments.•In its unperturbed form, the PT method is capable of re-creating corresponding Eulerian results.•We perturb the PT model, and a spatially-perturbed method better captures observed variability in the data. |
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ISSN: | 0169-7722 1873-6009 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jconhyd.2020.103642 |