Abstract

Globally, groundwater contamination by fluoride (F−) is a threat to the safe drinking water supply. Nevertheless, our understanding of the geochemical processes of F− mobilization to the groundwater by linking groundwater and aquifer material chemistry is limited. We therefore characterized that in the hard-rock aquifers of Central India, an area that has not been investigated thoroughly despite the known severity of the problem. Exploratory drilling of boreholes (n = 45) and lithostratigraphic modeling identified weathered basalt, vesicular basalt, fractured basalt, sandstone of Lameta, and fractured granite as major aquifers in the study area. The groundwater contamination by F− (concentration >1.5 mg/L) mainly occurred at depths >35 m bgl (at elevations <500 m amsl) of the fractured basalt and fractured granite aquifers, while samples collected from the shallow basalt, sandstone of Lameta, and shallow granite were mostly safe. The F− contamination of groundwater was primarily governed by the chemical evolution of groundwater along the flow path. Solute mass balance in groundwater, in conjunction with the mineralogical characterization of the aquifer materials, suggests that weathering of silicate and carbonate minerals was the dominant form of mineral dissolution in aquifers, which consumed dissolved CO2 along the flow path and resulted in an alkaline pH (>8) in groundwater of the deeper aquifers. The mobilization of F− in the groundwater could primarily be attributed to the ion exchange between OH− in water and structural F− in fluorapatite and F-bearing mica/amphibole. By assessing water quality and aquifer properties, this study suggests that primarily, the sandstone of Lameta and weathered and vesicular basalts can be targeted for F-safe drinking water supply in the study area. Targeting shallow aquifers can be an option for F-safe drinking water supply in other affected areas with similar geological and environmental settings.

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