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Effect of channel bed sediment on the transport behaviour of superparamagnetic silica encapsulated <scp>DNA</scp> microparticles in open channel injection experiments

Hydrological Processes 2023 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yuchen Tang, Yuchen Tang, Jan Willem Foppen, Jan Willem Foppen, Jan Willem Foppen, Jan Willem Foppen, Jan Willem Foppen, Jan Willem Foppen, Fay van Rhijn, Fay van Rhijn, Fay van Rhijn, Fay van Rhijn, Ahmed Abdelrady, Ahmed Abdelrady, Ahmed Abdelrady, Jan Willem Foppen, Jan Willem Foppen, Thom Bogaard Jan Willem Foppen, Jan Willem Foppen, Thom Bogaard Thom Bogaard Thom Bogaard Jan Willem Foppen, Thom Bogaard Jan Willem Foppen, Thom Bogaard

Summary

Researchers investigated how channel bed sediment affects the transport behaviour of superparamagnetic silica-encapsulated DNA microparticles (SiDNAFe) used as hydrological tracers, conducting laboratory injection experiments across four bed conditions and two water qualities. They found that mass recovery ranged from 50% to 120% depending on sediment type, with retention 1-2 orders of magnitude greater than gravitational settling rates, attributed to grain-scale hyporheic flows and water-sediment-particle interactions.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract Recently, superparamagnetic silica encapsulated DNA microparticles (SiDNAFe) were designed and in various experiments used as a hydrological tracer. We investigated the effect of bed characteristics on the transport behaviour and especially the mass loss of SiDNAFe in open channel injection experiments. Hereto, a series of laboratory injection experiments were conducted with four channel bed conditions (no sediment, fine river sediment, coarse sand, and goethite‐coated coarse sand) and two water qualities (tap water and Meuse water). Breakthrough curves (BTCs) were analysed and modelled. Mass loss of SiDNAFe was accounted for as a first‐order decay process included in a 1‐D advection and dispersion model with transient storage (OTIS). SiDNAFe BTCs could be adequately described by advection and dispersion with or without a first‐order decay process. SiDNAFe mass recoveries exhibited a wide range, varying from 50% to 120% from sediment‐free conditions to coarse (coated) sediment. In 6 out of 8 cases, SiDNAFe mass recovery was complete. Retention of SiDNAFe was 1–2 orders of magnitude greater than gravitational settling rates, as determined in Tang et al. ( Hydrological Processes , e14801, 2023). We reason this was due to grain‐scale hyporheic flows and coupled water‐sediment‐particle interactions. The dispersive behaviour of SiDNAFe generally mimicked that of NaCl tracer. We concluded that SiDNAFe can be used in tracing experiments. However, water quality and sediment characteristics may affect the fate of SiDNAFe in river environments. SiDNAFe is a promising tool for particulate multi‐tracing in large rivers.

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