Vadose Zone Journal (Jan 2020)

Macropore–matrix mass transfer of reactive solutes quantified by fluorescence imaging

  • Christoph Haas,
  • Martin Leue,
  • Ruth H. Ellerbrock,
  • Horst H. Gerke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/vzj2.20078
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Horizontal infiltration experiments with a fluorescent dye (e.g., Na‐fluorescein) potentially allow the quantification of the macropore–matrix mass transfer of reactive solutes through coated macropore surfaces. The objectives were (a) to determine the movement and map the spatial mass distributions of a reactive and fluorescent dye (i.e., Na‐fluorescein) at the millimeter scale during horizontal tracer application to the intact structural surface of a soil aggregate, and (b) to validate the method by comparing total masses as quantified with Fluorescence imaging with total applied dye masses. For the quantification of dissolved masses of dye, millimeter‐scaled distributed water contents obtained from horizontal flow simulation using Hydrus‐1D were multiplied with mapped dye solution concentrations. The spatial distribution of dye concentrations was visualized and quantified with a fluorescence imaging technique at a pixel resolution length of ∼100 μm. Submillimeter‐scaled distribution maps of adsorbed dye concentrations were derived using the calibrated Freundlich adsorption model. The sorption isotherm predicted that most of the dye was adsorbed to soil. In total, 1,366 μg of dye was transferred through the coated matrix block, of which 1,181 μg was adsorbed to soil. The applicability of the method was validated by comparing applied and recovered Na‐fluorescein masses, which corresponded relatively closely. Although the test of the approach presented here was limited by uncertainties regarding the local distributions of water contents and bulk density, the method could be applied to map two‐dimensional horizontal distributions of dye in an intact soil clod for quantifying macropore–matrix mass transfer of the reactive solute.