Abstract

Most analytical solutions available for the equations governing the advective–dispersive transport of multiple solutes undergoing sequential first-order decay reactions have been developed for infinite or semi-infinite spatial domains and steady-state boundary conditions. In this study, we present an analytical solution for a finite domain and a time-varying boundary condition. The solution was found using the Classic Integral Transform Technique (CITT) in combination with a filter function having separable space and time dependencies, implementation of the superposition principle, and using an algebraic transformation that changes the advection–dispersion equation for each species into a diffusion equation. The analytical solution was evaluated using a test case from the literature involving a four radionuclide decay chain. Results show that convergence is slower for advection-dominated transport problems. In all cases, the converged results were identical to those obtained with the previous solution for a semi-infinite domain, except near the exit boundary where differences were expected. Among other applications, the new solution should be useful for benchmarking numerical solutions because of the adoption of a finite spatial domain.

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