Title |
A unified theory for colloid transport: predicting attachment and mobilization under favorable and unfavorable conditions |
Publication Type |
thesis |
School or College |
College of Mines & Earth Sciences |
Department |
Geology & Geophysics |
Author |
Van Ness, Kurt D. |
Date |
2019 |
Description |
Colloid attachment and detachment behaviors concern a wide range of environmental contexts but have typically been mechanistically predicted exclusive of one another despite their obvious coupling. Furthermore, previous mechanistic prediction often addressed packed column contexts wherein specific forces and torques on the colloid could not be well constrained, preventing robust predictions. These weaknesses were addressed through an improved treatment and calibration of the contact between the colloid and collector. Attachment and flow perturbation experiments in the presence of colloid-collector attraction (favorable conditions) permitted calibration of contact parameters without the complexity that comes with colloid-collector repulsion (unfavorable conditions). Combining calibrated contact parameters with discrete representative nanoscale heterogeneity (DRNH), developed to predict unfavorable attachment, provided an independent means to predict unfavorable detachment. The result was a mechanistic prediction that quantitatively agreed with experimental observation for both ionic strength and flow perturbation results, improving significantly upon previous qualitative prediction. |
Type |
Text |
Publisher |
University of Utah |
Subject |
Colloid transport; contaminant transport; DLVO theory; particle transport; trajectory simulation |
Dissertation Name |
Master of Science |
Language |
eng |
Rights Management |
(c) Kurt D. Van Ness |
Format |
application/pdf |
Format Medium |
application/pdf |
ARK |
ark:/87278/s60p701h |
Setname |
ir_etd |
ID |
1703496 |
Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s60p701h |