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Implications of Rate-Limited Mass Transfer for Aquifer Storage and Recovery
Pressure to decrease reliance on surface water storage has led to increased
interest in aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) systems. Recovery efficiency,
which is the ratio of the volume of recovered water that meets a predefined
standard to total volume of injected fluid, is a common criterion of ASR
viability. Recovery efficiency can be degraded by a number of physical and
geochemical processes, including rate-limited mass transfer (RLMT), which
describes the exchange of solutes between mobile and immobile pore fluids. RLMT
may control transport behavior that cannot be explained by advection and
dispersion. We present data from a pilot-scale ASR study in Charleston, South
Carolina, and develop a three-dimensional finite-difference model to evaluate
the impact of RLMT processes on ASR efficiency. The modeling shows that RLMT can
explain a rebound in salinity during fresh water storage in a brackish aquifer.
Multicycle model results show low efficiencies over one to three ASR cycles due
to RLMT degrading water quality during storage; efficiencies can evolve and
improve markedly, however, over multiple cycles, even exceeding efficiencies
generated by advection-dispersion only models. For an idealized ASR model where
RLMT is active, our simulations show a discrete range of diffusive length scales
over which the viability of ASR schemes in brackish aquifers would be hindered.
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