Mean flow direction modulates non-Fickian transport in a heterogeneous
alluvial aquifer-aquitard system
Abstract
Regional-scale groundwater quality degradation from nonpoint source
pollution threatens the long-term sustainability of major alluvial
aquifer-aquitard systems worldwide. Upscaled models can efficient
represent nonpoint source transport, but fail to accurately characterize
non-Fickian (anomalous) transport caused by mean flow direction
transience. In this study, we demonstrate that hydrogeologic factors
explain this failure. Specifically, vertical anisotropy in K and
seasonal pumping and recharge in typical alluvial aquifer systems can
fundamentally change hydraulic gradients and shift the mean flow
direction between mostly horizontal and mostly vertical flow. Detailed
3D flow and transport simulations in a heterogeneous alluvial aquifer
under varying mean flow directions indicate that alterations to
hydraulic gradients which control the mean flow direction can lead to
increasingly non-Fickian transport. Under mostly horizontal flow,
diffusion and slow advection dominant low-K facies slow mass transfer
rates from low-K material, and preferential flow along connected high-K
networks causes increased spatial spreading along the mean flow
direction. Conversely, predominantly vertical flow caused by spatially
distributed pumping and recharge shifts mass transfer processes in low-K
material from diffusion and slow advection dominant to advection
dominant, which results in vertically oriented particle trajectories
that compactly migrate through high- and low-K facies alike, leading to
increasingly Fickian transport. Thus, mean flow direction transience
driven by vertical anisotropy in K and seasonal pumping and recharge can
create oscillating transport patterns, ranging from persistently
non-Fickian to more Fickian. Results illustrate the hydrogeologic
factors that explain why upscaled transport models fail to capture
non-Fickian effects resulting from mean flow direction transience.