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publications > paper > surface-water transport of suspended matter through wetland vegetation of the Florida everglades > mathematical model
Surface-water transport of suspended matter through wetland vegetation of the Florida everglades
4. Mathematical Model[7] We quantified particle advection, dispersion, and immobilization kinetics by comparing measured TiO2 breakthrough curves to those calculated by a mathematical model. The model solves an equation that accounts for coupled advective-dispersive transport and rate-limited mass transfer in a domain of constant water depth, where particle dispersion is anisotropic and the mean flow velocity is uniform (i.e., independent of position) and in the direction parallel to the x axis of the coordinate system:where C is particle concentration, DLon, DLat, and DV are the longitudinal, lateral, and vertical dispersion coefficients, respectively, V is the mean surface-water velocity, and [8] We employed a finite-element method to solve equation (1) for a three-dimensional domain measuring 9.3 m long, 3 m wide (the channel width), and 0.6 m deep (Figure 1a). The model domain was discretized into 16,000 quadratic-Lagrange elements and the numerical solution to equation (1) was obtained for zero initial TiO2 concentrations, a zero gradient in TiO2 concentrations across the lateral boundaries, and zero total flux across both the free surface and ground surface. A specified TiO2 flux across a planar internal boundary (0.05 m x 1.8 m) was used to simulate the injection source (Figures 1a and 1b). [9] Observations from a separate experiment on the transport of bromide (a conservative tracer) revealed that the channel walls were permeable and that a cross-channel component of surface-water flow existed. While the bromide data could not be used to make quantitative determinations about TiO2 transport (because the magnitude of the flow velocities varied between experiments), the bromide results did emphasize the need to account for cross-channel flow within our modeling framework. We accomplished this by computing the magnitude and direction of the mean surface-water velocity from the component velocities and then we rotated the coordinate system for the model domain such that the x axis was parallel with the direction of V. The magnitude and direction of the mean surface-water velocity are expressed by where v1 and v2 are the components of the surface-water velocity parallel to the channel wall and perpendicular to the channel wall, respectively (Figure 1a). [10] We applied the model in inverse mode in order to estimate v1 and v2, as well as the parameters that govern dispersion (DLon, DLat, and DV) and particle-immobilization kinetics (
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Last updated: 13 August, 2008 @ 01:24 PM(KP)