Monitoring CO2 intrusion and associated geochemical transformations in a shallow groundwater system using complex electrical methods
Autor: | Susan S. Hubbard, John E. Peterson, Robert Trautz, Thomas M. Daley, Baptiste Dafflon, John D. Pugh, Jens Birkholzer, Yuxin Wu |
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Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
Carbonic acid
geography Carbon Sequestration Geological Phenomena geography.geographical_feature_category Bicarbonate Environmental engineering Electric Conductivity Aquifer Soil science General Chemistry Carbon Dioxide Hydrogen-Ion Concentration chemistry.chemical_compound Intrusion chemistry Electrical resistivity and conductivity Co2 leakage Environmental Chemistry Groundwater Geology Water Pollutants Chemical Leakage (electronics) Environmental Monitoring |
Zdroj: | Environmental sciencetechnology. 47(1) |
ISSN: | 1520-5851 |
Popis: | The risk of CO(2) leakage from a properly permitted deep geologic storage facility is expected to be very low. However, if leakage occurs it could potentially impact potable groundwater quality. Dissolved CO(2) in groundwater decreases pH, which can mobilize naturally occurring trace metals commonly contained in aquifer sediments. Observing such processes requires adequate monitoring strategies. Here, we use laboratory and field experiments to explore the sensitivity of time-lapse complex resistivity responses for remotely monitoring dissolved CO(2) distribution and geochemical transformations that may impact groundwater quality. Results show that electrical resistivity and phase responses correlate well with dissolved CO(2) injection processes. Specifically, resistivity initially decreases due to increase of bicarbonate and dissolved species. As pH continues to decrease, the resistivity rebounds toward initial conditions due to the transition of bicarbonate into nondissociated carbonic acid, which reduces the total concentration of dissociated species and thus the water conductivity. An electrical phase decrease is also observed, which is interpreted to be driven by the decrease of surface charge density as well as potential mineral dissolution and ion exchange. Both laboratory and field experiments demonstrate the potential of field complex resistivity method for remotely monitoring changes in groundwater quality due to CO(2) leakage. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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