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Effect of channel bed sediment on the transport behaviour of superparamagnetic silica encapsulated DNA microparticles in open channel injection experiments
Summary
Researchers investigated how riverbed sediment characteristics affect the transport and retention of DNA-tagged silica microparticles used as hydrological tracers. Different bed compositions caused varying particle losses, complicating the use of these tracers for flow studies. The findings also contribute to understanding how microplastic particles with similar properties interact with river sediment during transport.
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. Mass loss of SiDNAFe increased as a function of the surface roughness of the beds. Retention of SiDNAFe due to surface roughness was 1-2 orders of magnitude greater than gravitational settling rates, as determined in Tang et al. (2022). We speculate this was due to boundary layer kinetic attachment. The dispersive behaviour of SiDNAFe generally mimicked that of NaCl tracer, although SiDNAFe traveled faster on average due to a smaller effective cross-sectional area. No pattern was observed between SiDNAFe mass recovery and water qualities used. DNA concentration data uncertainty was mostly associated with lower SiDNAFe concentrations in the BTCs. This research highlights that riverbeds are important sinks, and the surface roughness affects the fate and transport characteristics of SiDNAFe when in proximity to the water-sediment interface. SiDNAFe possess promising potential as a surrogate for multi-tracing micro-contaminants (e.g., microplastics) in large rivers, which could be a promising tool for enhancing understanding of hydrological processes.
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