POLLUTEv10 Example 2: Pure Diffusion in a Soil Layer (No Sorption)

POLLUTEv10 Example 2 pure diffusion modeling in soil showing contaminant gradient through 4 meter soil layer
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This example is a fundamental case used to demonstrate pure diffusion of a conservative contaminant through soil. Unlike more complex landfill scenarios, this example isolates diffusion-only transport, making it ideal for understanding baseline contaminant migration behavior.


Overview of the Scenario

In this example, contaminant transport occurs through:

  • A 4 m thick soil layer
  • A constant concentration source at the top boundary
  • An underlying aquifer where:
    • Concentration is assumed to be zero (perfect sink)
    • Due to high flushing velocity, the aquifer is not explicitly modeled

Key simplifications:

  • ❌ No advection (Darcy velocity = 0)
  • ❌ No sorption (Kd = 0)
  • ✅ Transport driven entirely by molecular diffusion

Conceptual Model

The system represents a classic one-dimensional diffusion problem:

  • Top boundary → constant concentration source
  • Bottom boundary → zero concentration (instant removal)
  • Transport mechanism → Fickian diffusion

This setup is widely used in environmental engineering to:

  • Validate numerical models
  • Understand contaminant lag times
  • Benchmark analytical solutions

Input Parameters

PropertySymbolValueUnits
Darcy Velocityva0m/a
Diffusion CoefficientD0.01m²/a
Distribution CoefficientKd0cm³/g
Soil Porosityn0.4
Dry Densityρd1.5g/cm³
Soil ThicknessH4m
Sub-layers4
Base Concentrationcb0g/L

Governing Equation

Transport is governed by Fick’s Second Law of Diffusion:

Ct=D2Cx2\frac{\partial C}{\partial t} = D \frac{\partial^2 C}{\partial x^2}∂t∂C​=D∂x2∂2C​

Where:

  • C = concentration
  • t = time
  • D = diffusion coefficient
  • x = depth

Graphical Output: Depth vs Concentration for Different Times


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Analytical Insight

Because:

  • Kd = 0 → no retardation
  • va = 0 → no advection

The system behaves as a pure diffusion medium, meaning:

  • Travel time depends only on diffusion coefficient and thickness
  • No delay from sorption or flow
  • Faster breakthrough compared to real soils with adsorption

Key Results

  • Rapid contaminant migration relative to sorbing systems
  • Smooth concentration gradients over time
  • No retardation effects observed
  • Steady-state defined by linear gradient

Conclusions

  • Diffusion alone can drive significant contaminant movement
  • Absence of sorption represents a worst-case mobility scenario
  • Useful for validating transport models and comparing against more complex cases

Engineering Insights

  • This example represents a baseline condition — real-world systems usually show slower transport due to:
    • Sorption (Kd > 0)
    • Lower effective diffusion
  • The assumption of a perfect sink at the base is conservative and ensures:
    • Maximum downward flux
  • Dividing the soil into sub-layers improves numerical accuracy in POLLUTEv10

Applications

  • Landfill liner performance comparisons
  • Risk assessments for conservative contaminants
  • Model calibration and validation
  • Teaching and demonstration of diffusion principles

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