Abstract

Surfactant-enhanced aquifer remediation has been proved successful to remove dense non-aqueous phase liquids (DNAPLs) from contaminated sites. However, the underlying mechanisms of the DNAPL mobilization and solubilization at the pore scale remains to be addressed for efficient application to the field remediation system. In this work, the emerging microfluidic and imaging technologies are applied to investigate the dynamics of DNAPL remediation. Visualized experiments of the evolution of DNAPL remediation are performed to study the role of surfactant type, concentration and injection rate. The DNAPL remediation is dominated by mobilization followed by solubilization for most surfactants. Mobilization occurs as soon as surfactants and DNAPL are in contact until forming a new stable phase structure, and the solubilization continues until the end of injection. We observe the breakup behavior of long droplets and ganglia during the mobilization, which is attributed to the surfactant-reduced interfacial tension and thus expedites DNAPL mobilization and redistribution. During the solubilization, the formation of micelles incorporating DNAPL fractions increases the DNAPL concentration gradient and thus enhances the mass transfer, but the rate-limited diffusion of micelles reduces the mass transfer rate coefficient. Increasing the surfactant content and decreasing the injection rate can promote mobilization and solubilization. The DNAPL mobilization ability of the surfactants SDS and SDBS is stronger than SAOS and Tween 80 regardless of the injection rates. Tween 80 may be considered an ideal surfactant of only solubilization but not mobilization is desired. This work elucidates the pore-scale mechanisms during surfactant-enhanced DNAPL remediation, which are beneficial for upscaling studies, predictive modeling, and operation optimization of DNAPL remediation in the field.

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