Abstract

Modeling water flow and solute transport in the vadose zone is essential to understanding the fate of soil pollutants and their travel times towards groundwater bodies. It also helps design better irrigation strategies to control solute concentrations and fluxes in semiarid and arid regions. Heterogeneity, soil texture and wetting front instabilities determine the flow patterns and solute transport mechanisms in dry soils. When water is already present in the soil, the flow of an infiltration pulse depends on the spatial distribution of soil water and on its mobility. We present numerical simulations of passive solute transport during unstable infiltration of water into sandy soils that are prone to wetting front instability. We study the impact of the initial soil state, in terms of spatial distribution of water content, on the infiltration of a solute-rich water pulse. We generate random fields of initial moisture content with spatial structure, through multigaussian fields with prescribed correlation lengths. We characterize the patterns of water flow and solute transport, as well as the mass fluxes through the soil column. Our results indicate a strong interplay between preferential flow and channeling due to fingering and the spatial distribution of soil water at the beginning of infiltration. Fingering and initial water saturation fields have a strong effect on solute diffusion and dilution into the ambient water during infiltration, suggesting an effective separation between mobile and inmobile transport domains that are controlled by the preferential flow paths due to fingering.

Highlights

  • Water flow and solute transport through unsaturated soil control the movement and distribution of pollutants in the vadose zone [1] and the contamination of groundwater resources [2,3]

  • We show that the patterns of preferential flow and solute transport and dilution into the ambient preexisting soil water are controlled by the spatial patterns of the distribution of initial pore water

  • We show that the initial water content and its spatial distribution plays a key role in the patterns of water infiltration and solute transport in unsaturated coarse soil

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Summary

Introduction

Water flow and solute transport through unsaturated soil control the movement and distribution of pollutants in the vadose zone [1] and the contamination of groundwater resources [2,3]. Numerical simulation of multiphase flow in porous media is a powerful tool to understand water flow and solute transport in the unsaturated zone, from the pore scale to the field scale [12,18,19]. Experimental observations show that preferential flow due to fingering instabilities may significantly influence infiltration into dry sandy soils [33,34,35,36,37], controlling the transport of contaminants to surface and groundwaters [38]

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