Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Need for direct measurements of coupled microbiological and hydrological
processes at different scales in porous media systems"
08-001
Reactive transport models contain terms describing microbiological and
hydrological processes that control fate and transport of contaminants in porous
media. Most models assume that microbial reaction rate is independent of
microbial biomass distribution or that
biomass is uniformly distributed across media surfaces in a manner that mass
transport does not limit reaction rate. Experimental data, as well as some
computational models, however, suggest otherwise, indicating a need to
experimentally establish how the coupling of
microbial biomass and flow distribution influence microbial reaction rates.
Nuclear magnetic resonance techniques offer the opportunity to quantify in three
dimensions the coupling of microbial biomass and flow velocity distribution in
opaque porous media at multiple scales
in a noninvasive manner. Experimental data obtained with these techniques can be
used to improve the accuracy of boundary conditions used by reactive transport
models to predict contaminant fate and transport at the pore and core scales.
Further improvements in surface
and subsurface magnetic resonance techniques may allow future detection and
measurement of microbial biomass distribution in the subsurface at the field
scale.
Geesey, G.G. and A.C. Mitchell, "Need for direct measurements of coupled
microbiological and hydrological processes at different scales in porous media
systems," J. Hydrologic Eng., 13(1):28-36 (2008) Abstract 08-001
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