Abstract

Assessing the groundwater quality is important for the efficient exploitation of water resources in semi-arid areas. The study area in northeast Algeria mostly depends on groundwater as its main source of water, and the quality of groundwater is becoming important due to the increasing need for freshwater. The hydrochemical characteristics and water quality of groundwater in the Tebessa-Ain Chabro were assessed using water quality indices, geochemical modeling, and multivariate statistical approaches. The study discovered that the groundwater samples could be classified into four distinct water groups using hierarchical cluster analysis in Q mode (HCA) based on their electrical conductivity. We identified three forms of water: mixed (Ca2+–Mg2+–Cl−), Na+–K+–HCO3−, and Ca2+–Cl−. According to the water quality assessment, only 38% of the samples were deemed suitable for human consumption, while 34% were categorized as poor water, 10% as extremely poor, and 17% as unsafe for drinking. The irrigation water quality index identified four classifications: low, moderate, high, and severe restriction, with corresponding percentages of 31%, 31%, 7%, and 31%. The nitrate pollution index (NPI) showed that 48% of samples fell into the moderate pollution class. Human activity, such as sewage infiltration and waste disposal in open areas, was the cause of this nitrate contamination. The saturation index values showed that groundwater was less saturated in halite and sylvite and more saturated in aragonite, calcite, dolomite, anhydrite, gypsum, and hydroxyapatite. The Tebessa region’s groundwater’s hydrochemical properties and water quality have been assessed using multivariate statistical techniques, geochemical modeling, and water quality indexes. The study’s conclusions can provide a foundation for upcoming research evaluating the region’s groundwater quality.

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