Abstract

This paper describes laboratory model tests involving the placement of domestic landfill leachate on top of a layer of saturated undisturbed clayey soil and allowing chemical constituents to migrate into the soil by diffusion only. During the testing period (15 days), samples from the overlying leachate were regularly collected and analyzed for the chemical constituents of interest (i.e., Cl−, Na+, K+, Mg++, and Ca++). At the end of the test, the soil layer was sectioned to determine the pore-water and adsorbed concentration variations with depth for each species. Mathematical model POLLUTE was then used to back-figure both the diffusion coefficient (D) and the adsorption term (ρK). The measured diffusion coefficients at a temperature of 10 °C were determined to be [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], and [Formula: see text]. The corresponding adsorption terms were [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], and [Formula: see text].Ca++ and Mg++, originally predominant on the clay exchange sites, were heavily desorbed to accommodate the adsorption of migrating Na+, K+, and possibly NH4+, causing hardness halo effects that the model could not fit. This behaviour corresponds to that commonly observed at domestic waste sites in southern Ontario.The importance of multiple contaminant migration on diffusion rates was assessed by comparing the leachate models with similar models using a variety of single salts dissolved in distilled water as the source solutions. For the single-salt models, all species considered, including Ca++ and Mg++, behaved in a way that could be described by conventional Fickian theory. A comparison of the diffusion and adsorption parameters obtained from the two types of models indicated that for both Na+ and K+, the measured D and ρK from the leachate models were 20 and 60% lower, respectively, than the values obtained from the single-salt models. For Cl−, the diffusion coefficient obtained from the leachate models was 25% higher than that obtained from the single-salt models.For the Sarnia grey soil used, both D and ρK are significantly influenced by the types and amounts of co-diffusing species present in the initial source solutions. Laboratory tests conducted to determine diffusion parameters for use in design should be run with soils and source solutions chemically identical to those expected in the field. Key words: domestic waste leachate, multiple contaminant migration, clayey soil, diffusion, adsorption, laboratory study.

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