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Title: Vadose Zone Gas Migration and Surface Effluxes after a Controlled Natural Gas Release into an Unconfined Shallow Aquifer
Authors: Forde, O.N. .
Participants: Mayer, K.U.
Cahill, A.G
Mayer, B.
Cherry, J.A.
Parker, B.L.
Issue Date: 2018
Series/Report no.: Vadose Zone Journal, Volume 17, Issue 1 (2018), pp.1-16
Abstract: This paper presents results from vadose zone gas and surface efflux monitoring during a natural gas release experiment at Canadian Forces Base Borden, Alliston, Ontario, Canada. Over 72 d, 51 m3 of natural gas (>93% CH4) was injected into a shallow, unconfined sand aquifer at depths of 4.5 and 9 m. Methane and CO2 effluxes in combination with soil gas concentrations and stable C isotopic signatures were used to quantify the spatiotemporal migration and fate of injected gas. Preferential gas migration pathways led to vadose zone hot spots, with CH4 concentrations exceeding the lower explosive limit (5% v/v). From these hot spots, episodic surface CH4 effluxes (temporally exceeding 2500 μmol m−2 s−1 [3465 g m−2 d−1]) occurred during active injection. Higher injection rates led to increased average CH4 effluxes and greater lateral migration, as evidenced by a growing emission area approaching 25 m2 for the highest injection rate. Reactive transport modeling showed that high CH4 fluxes resulted in advection‐dominated migration and limited CH4 oxidation, whereas lower CH4 effluxes were diffusion dominated with substantial CH4 oxidation. These results and our interpretations allowed us to develop a conceptual model of fugitive CH4 migration from the vadose zone to the ground surface.
URI: http://tailieuso.tlu.edu.vn/handle/DHTL/9362
Source: https://acsess.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.2136/vzj2018.02.0033
ISSN: 1539-1663
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