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Soil column experiments used as a means to assess transport, sorption, and biodegradation of pesticides in groundwater
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Citations
29
References
2008
Year
Soil Column ExperimentsEnvironmental ChemistryConservative TracerEngineeringPesticide-residue AnalysisEnvironmental EngineeringSoil PollutionBioremediationEnvironmental RemediationSynthetic GroundwaterSoil ContaminationGroundwater PollutionEcotoxicologyEnvironmental ToxicologyEnvironmental FateLow SolubilitySoil BioremediationGroundwater Remediation
Soil column experiments are used to investigate the fate of three pesticides of high, intermediate, and low solubility in groundwater: N- phosphonomethyl glycine (glyphosate); O,O-diethyl-S-[(ethylthio)methyl]phosphorodithioate (phorate); (2,4-dichlorophenoxy)acetic acid (2,4-D). Feed solutions are prepared by adding each pesticide (100 mg/L glyphosate, 50 micro g/L phorate, 50 mg/L 2,4-D) along with conservative tracer, KBr, in synthetic groundwater. The concentration of the pesticides in effluents is detected by ion chromatography (glyphosate, 2,4-D) and GC-FID (phorate). The Br(-) breakthrough curves are employed to estimate the dispersion coefficient and mean pore velocity in each column. Solute transport and reactive models accounting for equilibrium/non-equilibrium sorption and biodegradation are coupled with inverse modeling numerical codes to estimate the kinetic parameters for all pesticides.
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