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Colloid Transport and Retention in Constricted Tube Pore Spaces With Diverse Geometries and Orientations

Water Resources Research 2024 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Amir Raoof, Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Amir Raoof, Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang Darrell W.S. Tang

Summary

This study used Lagrangian particle tracking to simulate colloid transport and retention in 3D constricted tube pore spaces with diverse geometries and orientations, incorporating gravity, Brownian motion, and DLVO interactions. The dimensionless settling number was found to govern collection efficiency, with low-settling particles attaching preferentially at pore extremities where they are difficult to remobilize.

Abstract Colloidal contaminants infiltrate and can be attached onto grain surfaces of soils and aquifers, where they may persist. In this study, Lagrangian particle tracking is used to investigate particle trajectories and attachment in pore and fracture spaces modeled as three‐dimensional constricted tubes with diverse geometries and orientations relative to gravity. A comprehensive force balance arising from hydrodynamic drag and lift, gravitational settling, Brownian motion, and attractive DLVO interactions is simulated. Results show that the collection efficiency η is primarily governed by the dimensionless settling number 𝑆, representing the relative dominance of gravitational over hydrodynamic forces experienced by the particles. High‐𝑆 scenarios have larger η and are more sensitive to pore orientation, while low‐𝑆 scenarios are more sensitive to pore geometry. For all scenarios but especially low‐ S scenarios, the majority of colloid attachment occurs near pore extremities, where fluid velocities are low, such that mechanical remobilization of particles attached is improbable. In low‐𝑆 scenarios, particles may spread and become immobilized at greater distances from the contamination source owing to lower η , are harder to mechanically remobilize as they attach more disproportionately at pore extremities, and have trajectories more sensitive to minor forces, rendering their environmental fates complex. Characterizing the collection efficiency and deposition morphology for various pore space geometries and orientations is crucial in understanding particle fate and developing continuum‐scale models of colloid transport in real soils, where pore spaces are heterogeneous and advection paths are tortuous.

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