TY - JOUR
T1 - Flux-Corrected Transport with MT3DMS for Positive Solution of Transport with Full-Tensor Dispersion
AU - Yan, Shuo
AU - Valocchi, Albert J.
N1 - This work was partly supported by the University of Illinois College of Engineering Abel Bliss Professorship, and a grant from the Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (Project ID: ER‐2530). We thank reviewers Vivek Bedekar and Chris Langevin for their helpful comments and suggestions for improving our paper.
PY - 2020/5/1
Y1 - 2020/5/1
N2 - Solute transport is usually modeled by the advection-dispersion-reaction equation. In the standard approach, mechanical dispersion is a tensor with principal directions parallel and perpendicular to the flow vector. Since realistic scenarios include nonuniform and unsteady flow fields, the governing equation has full tensor mechanical dispersion. When conventional grid-based numerical methods are used, approximation of the cross terms arising from the off-diagonal terms cause nonphysical solution with oscillations. As an example, for the common scenario of contaminant input into a domain with zero initial concentration, the cross-dispersion terms can result in negative concentrations that can wreak havoc in reactive transport applications. To address this issue, we use the well-known flux-corrected-transport (FCT) technique for a standard finite volume method. Although FCT has most often been used to eliminate oscillations resulting from discretization of the advection term for explicit time stepping, we show that it can be adapted for full-tensor dispersion and implicit time stepping. Unlike other approaches based on new discretization techniques (e.g., mimetic finite difference, nonlinear finite volume), FCT has the advantage of being flexible and widely applicable. Implementation of FCT requires solving an additional system of equations at each time step, using a modified “low order” matrix and a modified right-hand-side vector. To demonstrate the flexibility of FCT, we have modified the well-known and widely used groundwater solute transport simulator, MT3DMS. We apply the new simulator, MT3DMS-FCT, to several benchmark problems that suffer from negative concentrations when using MT3DMS. The new results are mass conservative and strictly nonnegative.
AB - Solute transport is usually modeled by the advection-dispersion-reaction equation. In the standard approach, mechanical dispersion is a tensor with principal directions parallel and perpendicular to the flow vector. Since realistic scenarios include nonuniform and unsteady flow fields, the governing equation has full tensor mechanical dispersion. When conventional grid-based numerical methods are used, approximation of the cross terms arising from the off-diagonal terms cause nonphysical solution with oscillations. As an example, for the common scenario of contaminant input into a domain with zero initial concentration, the cross-dispersion terms can result in negative concentrations that can wreak havoc in reactive transport applications. To address this issue, we use the well-known flux-corrected-transport (FCT) technique for a standard finite volume method. Although FCT has most often been used to eliminate oscillations resulting from discretization of the advection term for explicit time stepping, we show that it can be adapted for full-tensor dispersion and implicit time stepping. Unlike other approaches based on new discretization techniques (e.g., mimetic finite difference, nonlinear finite volume), FCT has the advantage of being flexible and widely applicable. Implementation of FCT requires solving an additional system of equations at each time step, using a modified “low order” matrix and a modified right-hand-side vector. To demonstrate the flexibility of FCT, we have modified the well-known and widely used groundwater solute transport simulator, MT3DMS. We apply the new simulator, MT3DMS-FCT, to several benchmark problems that suffer from negative concentrations when using MT3DMS. The new results are mass conservative and strictly nonnegative.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85077912722
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85077912722#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1111/gwat.12976
DO - 10.1111/gwat.12976
M3 - Article
C2 - 31883114
AN - SCOPUS:85077912722
SN - 0017-467X
VL - 58
SP - 338
EP - 348
JO - GroundWater
JF - GroundWater
IS - 3
ER -