Abstract

AbstractA decomposition of the diffusion flux equation for an electrostatically bound and mobile hydrated ion into two components is proposed. The first component includes the effects arising solely from the irregular pore shape and increase in solvent viscosity in the proximity of negatively charged pore walls. Apart from these effects, the second flux component includes an additional contribution from an increased (decreased) concentration for cations (anions) close to the pore walls. Defining the distribution coefficient, Kd, in a fashion that allows negative values for co-ions readily accounts for their exclusion without the need to introduce somewhat artificial quantities like the “effective co-ion porosity”. In this study, it is thus possible to retain the purely volumetric meaning of the porosity and to maintain consistency throughout the conceptualization for anions, cations and electrically neutral species. Furthermore, the decomposition of the flux equation provides support for surface diffusion, a subject of great controversy and lively debate in the literature. In this connection, the role of concentration to regulate the diffusive flux for ions in relation to neutral species is emphasized. Implications for the theoretical apparent and effective diffusivities in compacted montmorillonite clay are also discussed and a modified form of the macroscopic theory is proposed.

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