Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1016/j.jconhyd.2006.01.001
Title (Primary) Multi-process herbicide transport in structured soil columns: Experiments and model analysis
Author Köhne, J.M.; Köhne, S.; Šimůnek, J.
Source Titel Journal of Contaminant Hydrology
Year 2006
Department BOPHY
Volume 85
Issue 1-2
Page From 1
Page To 32
Language englisch
Keywords Pesticides; Preferential flow; Reactive transport; Physical nonequilibrium; Chemical nonequilibrium; Modeling; Dual-permeability; Triple-porosity; HYDRUS-1D
Abstract Model predictions of pesticide transport in structured soils are complicated by multiple processes acting concurrently. In this study, the hydraulic, physical, and chemical nonequilibrium (HNE, PNE, and CNE, respectively) processes governing herbicide transport under variably saturated flow conditions were studied. Bromide (Br-), isoproturon (IPU, 3-(4-isoprpylphenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea) and terbuthylazine (TER, N2-tert-butyl-6-chloro-N4-ethyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4-diamine) were applied to two soil columns. An aggregated Ap soil column and a macroporous, aggregated Ah soil column were irrigated at a rate of 1 cm h- 1 for 3 h. Two more irrigations at the same rate and duration followed in weekly intervals. Nonlinear (Freundlich) equilibrium and two-site kinetic sorption parameters were determined for IPU and TER using batch experiments. The observed water flow and Br- transport were inversely simulated using mobile-immobile (MIM), dual-permeability (DPM), and combined triple-porosity (DP-MIM) numerical models implemented in HYDRUS-1D, with improving correspondence between empirical data and model results. Using the estimated HNE and PNE parameters together with batch-test derived equilibrium sorption parameters, the preferential breakthrough of the weakly adsorbed IPU in the Ah soil could be reasonably well predicted with the DPM approach, whereas leaching of the strongly adsorbed TER was predicted less well. The transport of IPU and TER through the aggregated Ap soil could be described consistently only when HNE, PNE, and CNE were simultaneously accounted for using the DPM. Inverse parameter estimation suggested that two-site kinetic sorption in inter-aggregate flow paths was reduced as compared to within aggregates, and that large values for the first-order degradation rate were an artifact caused by irreversible sorption. Overall, our results should be helpful to enhance the understanding and modeling of multi-process pesticide transport through structured soils during variably saturated water flow.
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=2791
Köhne, J.M., Köhne, S., Šimůnek, J. (2006):
Multi-process herbicide transport in structured soil columns: Experiments and model analysis
J. Contam. Hydrol. 85 (1-2), 1 - 32 10.1016/j.jconhyd.2006.01.001