Sustaining Irrigation Supplies through Immobilization of Groundwater Arsenic In Situ .
Jing SunYuqin SunHenning PrommerBenjamin C BostickQingsong LiuMeng MaZengyi LiSonglin LiuAdam J SiadeChao LiShuangbao HanYan ZhengPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2024)
Geogenic arsenic (As) in groundwater is widespread, affecting drinking water and irrigation supplies globally, with food security and safety concerns on the rise. Here, we present push-pull tests that demonstrate field-scale As immobilization through the injection of small amounts of ferrous iron (Fe) and nitrate, two readily available agricultural fertilizers. Such injections into an aquifer with As-rich (200 ± 52 μg/L) reducing groundwater led to the formation of a regenerable As reactive filter in situ, producing 15 m 3 of groundwater meeting the irrigation water quality standard of 50 μg/L. Concurrently, sediment magnetic properties were markedly enhanced around the well screen, pointing to neo-formed magnetite-like minerals. A reactive transport modeling approach was used to quantitatively evaluate the experimental observations and assess potential strategies for larger-scale implementation. The modeling results demonstrate that As removal was primarily achieved by adsorption onto neo-formed minerals and that an increased adsorption site density coincides with the finer-grained textures of the target aquifer. Up-scaled model simulations with 80-fold more Fe-nitrate reactants suggest that enough As-safe water can be produced to irrigate 1000 m 2 of arid land for one season of water-intense rice cultivation at a low cost without causing undue contamination in surface soils that threatens agricultural sustainability.
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