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Conductivity and transit time estimates of a soil liner

January 1, 1990

A field-scale soil linear was built to assess the feasibilty of constructing a liner to meet the saturated hydraulic conductivity requirement of the U.S. EPA (i.e., less than 1 ?? 10-7 cm/s), and to determine the breakthrough and transit times of water and tracers through the liner. The liner, 8 ?? 15 ?? 0.9 m, was constructed in 15-cm compacted lifts using a 20,037-kg pad-foot compactor and standard engineering practices. Estimated saturated hydraulic conductivities were 2.4 ?? 10-9 cm/s, based on data from large-ring infiltrometers; 4.0 ?? 10-8 cm/s from small-ring infiltrometers; and 5.0 ?? 10-8 cm/s from a water-balance analysis. These estimates were derived from 1 year of monitoring water infiltration into the linear. Breakthrough of tracers at the base of the liner was estimated to be between 2 and 13 years, depending on the method of calculation and the assumptions used in the calculation.

Publication Year 1990
Title Conductivity and transit time estimates of a soil liner
Authors I.G. Krapac, K. Cartwright, S.V. Panno, B.R. Hensel, K.H. Rehfeldt, B.L. Herzog
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70016190
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse