Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8081/jspui/handle/123456789/7710
Title: EXPERIMENTAL AND NUMERICAL STUDY OF SOLUTE TRANSPORT IN LAYERED SOIL
Authors: Meena, Manish Kumar
Keywords: CIVIL ENGINEERING;SOLUTE TRANSPORT;LAYERED SOIL;CONTAMINANT TRANSPORT
Issue Date: 2010
Abstract: Contaminant transport in porous media is very interesting and motivated by concerns over the presence of a wide variety of chemical substances and wastes in the subsurface environment. The transport of contaminants play a dominant role in layered soil and attenuation processes occur while contaminants travel through the subsurface porous media. In this study, solute transport through saturated single and multilayered soils is studied using laboratory experiments and implicit finite difference approximations of the solute transport equation (for chloride and chromium). Soil water and physical characteristics as well as solute sorption properties are measured and/or calculated for each soil layer. Linear adsorption processes are used to predict adsorption in each layer. Water flux was assumed constant for water-saturated layered soil profiles.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/7710
Other Identifiers: M.Tech
Research Supervisor/ Guide: Ojha, C. S. P.
Sharma, P. K.
metadata.dc.type: M.Tech Dessertation
Appears in Collections:MASTERS' THESES (Civil Engg)

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