LABORATORY EXPERIMENT OF IRON NANOPARTICLE TRANSPORT IN A ROCK FRACTURE WITH ONLINE CONCENTRATION DETECTION PROBES

1 HOKR Milan
Co-authors:
1 PARMA Petr 2 JANKOVSKÝ Filip 2 ZUNA Milan 3 MRAZÍK Miloslav
Institutions:
1 Technical University of Liberec, Liberec, Czech Republic, EU, milan.hokr@tul.cz
2 ÚJV Řež, a.s., Husinec, Czech Republic, EU, filip.jankovsky@ujv.cz
3 self-employed, Liberec, Czech Republic, EU, mmrazik@volny.cz
Conference:
12th International Conference on Nanomaterials - Research & Application, Brno, Czech Republic, EU, October 21 - 23, 2020
Proceedings:
Proceedings 12th International Conference on Nanomaterials - Research & Application
Pages:
311-316
ISBN:
978-80-87294-98-7
ISSN:
2694-930X
Published:
28th December 2020
Proceedings of the conference were published in Web of Science and Scopus.
Metrics:
660 views / 454 downloads
Abstract

Principles, design and pilot use of a new probe for zero-valent iron nanoparticles (nZVI) concentration measurement in a micro-borehole are described in the paper. Effect of nZVI on coil inductance is known and used for such measurement before; the presented improvements relate to smaller dimensions, configuration, and electric circuit data accuracy, so that the probe can detect nZVI in small volume of suspension in a narrow fracture. Multichannel apparatus was made for a grid of boreholes. Test experiments were made with nZVI particles breakthrough in an artificial fracture in a granite block. The concentration is measured both by the new probe inside the block and by chemical analyses of samples at the outlet. The spontaneous particle immobilization did not allow saturation with constant concentration necessary for calibration, but within the constraints of input and output concentration and a fully submerged probe test, the quantitative sensitivity of the probe corresponds to theoretical expectations. Probe temperature dependence was also resolved.

Keywords: Nanoparticles, zero-valent iron, electromagnetic, groundwater pollution, measurement

© This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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