TY - JOUR
T1 - Vadose zone oxygen (O2) dynamics during drying and wetting cycles
T2 - An artificial recharge laboratory experiment
AU - Dutta, Tanushree
AU - Carles-Brangarí, Albert
AU - Fernàndez-Garcia, Daniel
AU - Rubol, Simonetta
AU - Tirado-Conde, Joel
AU - Sanchez-Vila, Xavier
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015.
PY - 2015/8/1
Y1 - 2015/8/1
N2 - Vadose zone oxygen dynamics control all subsurface redox reactions and play a decisive role in maintaining groundwater quality. Although drying and wetting events are common in artificial recharge, their effects on subsurface oxygen distribution are poorly documented. We monitored oxygen concentration in the unsaturated zone in a mid-scale (1m high) laboratory soil lysimeter, which was subjected to short wetting and drying cycles that simulated a highly permeable shallow aquifer recharged by river water. Ten cycles of varying duration were performed for a period of 85days. Measurements of oxygen in the liquid and the gas phases were recorded every 20s using non-invasive optical fibers (PreSens). The results provided high-resolution (in time) oxygen concentration maps. The infiltration rate revealed a decreasing trend during wetting cycles associated with biological clogging. Such a decrease with time was accompanied by a depletion of O2 concentration, occurring within the first few hours of the infiltration. During drying, O2 concentrations recovered rapidly at all depths owing to air flushing, resulting in a stratified vertical profile consistent with the biological consumption of O2 along the air infiltration path. Furthermore, drying periods caused a potential recovery of the infiltration capacity while preserving the soil biological activity. Scraping also led to the recovery of the infiltration capacity of the soil but was less effective than drying. Our experiment suggests that the small-scale heterogeneity played a key role in accurately mapping pore-scale O2 concentrations and should be considered in modeling O2 fluxes of unsaturated soils under natural or managed recharge conditions.
AB - Vadose zone oxygen dynamics control all subsurface redox reactions and play a decisive role in maintaining groundwater quality. Although drying and wetting events are common in artificial recharge, their effects on subsurface oxygen distribution are poorly documented. We monitored oxygen concentration in the unsaturated zone in a mid-scale (1m high) laboratory soil lysimeter, which was subjected to short wetting and drying cycles that simulated a highly permeable shallow aquifer recharged by river water. Ten cycles of varying duration were performed for a period of 85days. Measurements of oxygen in the liquid and the gas phases were recorded every 20s using non-invasive optical fibers (PreSens). The results provided high-resolution (in time) oxygen concentration maps. The infiltration rate revealed a decreasing trend during wetting cycles associated with biological clogging. Such a decrease with time was accompanied by a depletion of O2 concentration, occurring within the first few hours of the infiltration. During drying, O2 concentrations recovered rapidly at all depths owing to air flushing, resulting in a stratified vertical profile consistent with the biological consumption of O2 along the air infiltration path. Furthermore, drying periods caused a potential recovery of the infiltration capacity while preserving the soil biological activity. Scraping also led to the recovery of the infiltration capacity of the soil but was less effective than drying. Our experiment suggests that the small-scale heterogeneity played a key role in accurately mapping pore-scale O2 concentrations and should be considered in modeling O2 fluxes of unsaturated soils under natural or managed recharge conditions.
KW - Biological processes
KW - Drying-wetting cycles
KW - Infiltration
KW - Managed aquifer recharge
KW - Oxygen concentration dynamics
KW - Precision sensing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84929095975&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2015.04.048
DO - 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2015.04.048
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84929095975
VL - 527
SP - 151
EP - 159
JO - Journal of Hydrology
JF - Journal of Hydrology
SN - 0022-1694
ER -