The risk to groundwater quality following a sub-surface spillage of immiscible pollutants
such as oil, petroleum and other organic chemicals is an increasingly potent threat,
through escalating industrial application of such pollutants.
This study significantly enhances the understanding of the flow of immiscible pollutants
within soil, through field scale investigations to define the spatial variability and extent of
a contaminated area and the development of a comprehensive framework for the analysis
of oil pollutant migration. This study represents a first attempt by researchers to analyse
oil pollutant migration on a wide range of scales, from pore- to field-level.
The research shows that quantity of pollutant is a critical factor in determining the extent
of oil migration. Permeability and porosity of the sample material are also important
secondary factors. High permeability assists the migration of oil pollutants. Soils with a
high porosity allow the pollutant to migrate vertically under the influence of gravity,
whereas soils with low porosity induce lateral oil migration, as the oil spreads from the
point of injection. A Jull scale field study using contrasting soil types determines that oil
migration is approximately symmetrical about the point of injection.
Experimental data is used to establish modelling capabilities for the characterisation of
pollutant migration. Modelling is undertaken at two levels. The first consists of the
development of simple Gaussian equations based upon observations of oil glomuses. The
glomus approach, newly developed in this work, can be compared to a fractal model, with
the glomuses observed in each of the different scales studied.
Date of Award | 2000 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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SUB-SURFACE MIGRATION OF AN OIL POLLUTANT INTO AQUIFERS
MACDONALD, L. A. (Author). 2000
Student thesis: PhD