Adsorption
As species travel through a porous medium they typically attach to (adsorb), and detach (desorb) from the solid phase, which slows chemical transport through the porous medium. Adsorption and desorption respectively reduces or increases species concentrations in the fluid. The adsorption properties vary between chemicals, so a plume containing multiple species can separate into components (Ref. 6). The Adsorption feature includes three predefined relationships to predict the solid concentrations, cPi from the concentration in the liquid phase, ci:
(3-17)
The above equations contains the following parameters:
User defined isotherm KP (SI unit: m3/kg).
Freundlich: Freundlich constant KF (SI unit:·mol/kg), Freundlich exponent NF (dimensionless), and reference concentration cref (SI unit: mol/m3).
Langmuir: Langmuir constant KL (SI unit: m3/mol), and adsorption maximum cPmax (SI unit: mol/kg).
Using a Species Source feature, arbitrary expressions can be entered to define, for example, non-equilibrium and temperature-dependent adsorption laws, including those set out by Fetter (Ref. 7) and Bear and Verruijt (Ref. 8).
The retardation factor, RF, describes how adsorption slows the solute velocity, uc, relative to the average linear velocity of the fluid, ua, as in
If the contaminant moves at the average linear velocity of the fluid for RF = 1. For RF > 1, the contaminant velocity is smaller than the fluid velocity owing to residence time on solids.