Molly S. Costanza-Robinson
Middlebury College
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Featured researches published by Molly S. Costanza-Robinson.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2012
Molly S. Costanza-Robinson; Zheng Zheng; Eric J. Henry; Benjamin D. Estabrook; Malcolm H. Littlefield
Surfactant miscible-displacement experiments represent a conventional means of estimating air-water interfacial area (A(I)) in unsaturated porous media. However, changes in surface tension during the experiment can potentially induce unsaturated flow, thereby altering interfacial areas and violating several fundamental method assumptions, including that of steady-state flow. In this work, the magnitude of surfactant-induced flow was quantified by monitoring moisture content and perturbations to effluent flow rate during miscible-displacement experiments conducted using a range of surfactant concentrations. For systems initially at 83% moisture saturation (S(W)), decreases of 18-43% S(W) occurred following surfactant introduction, with the magnitude and rate of drainage inversely related to the surface tension of the surfactant solution. Drainage induced by 0.1 mM sodium dodecyl benzene sulfonate, commonly used for A(I) estimation, resulted in effluent flow rate increases of up to 27% above steady-state conditions and is estimated to more than double the interfacial area over the course of the experiment. Depending on the surfactant concentration and the moisture content used to describe the system, A(I) estimates varied more than 3-fold. The magnitude of surfactant-induced flow is considerably larger than previously recognized and casts doubt on the reliability of A(I) estimation by surfactant miscible-displacement.
Journal of Contaminant Hydrology | 2013
Molly S. Costanza-Robinson; Tyson D. Carlson; Mark L. Brusseau
Gas-phase transport experiments were conducted using a large weighing lysimeter to evaluate retention processes for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in water-unsaturated (vadose-zone) systems, and to test the utility of gas-phase tracers for predicting VOC retardation. Trichloroethene (TCE) served as a model VOC, while trichlorofluoromethane (CFM) and heptane were used as partitioning tracers to independently characterize retention by water and the air-water interface, respectively. Retardation factors for TCE ranged between 1.9 and 3.5, depending on water content. The results indicate that dissolution into the bulk water was the primary retention mechanism for TCE under all conditions studied, contributing approximately two-thirds of the total measured retention. Accumulation at the air-water interface comprised a significant fraction of the observed retention for all experiments, with an average contribution of approximately 24%. Sorption to the solid phase contributed approximately 10% to retention. Water contents and air-water interfacial areas estimated based on the CFM and heptane tracer data, respectively, were similar to independently measured values. Retardation factors for TCE predicted using the partitioning-tracer data were in reasonable agreement with the measured values. These results suggest that gas-phase tracer tests hold promise for characterizing the retention and transport of VOCs in the vadose-zone.
Archive | 2006
Molly S. Costanza-Robinson; Mark L. Brusseau
Solute dispersion refers to the spatial spreading of a solute plume over time. The spreading is essentially a mixing and consequent dilution of the solute plume with the resident fluid, as depicted in Figure 7.1. Consideration of dispersion is critical to understanding gas-phase transport in porous media. Many transport principles that were originally developed to describe behavior in saturated porous media, and later for unsaturated water flow, can also be readily
Biomass & Bioenergy | 2011
Robert B. Levine; Molly S. Costanza-Robinson; Grace A. Spatafora
Water Resources Research | 2006
Mark L. Brusseau; Sheng Peng; G. Schnaar; Molly S. Costanza-Robinson
Water Resources Research | 2002
Molly S. Costanza-Robinson; Mark L. Brusseau
Water Resources Research | 2011
Molly S. Costanza-Robinson; Benjamin D. Estabrook; David F. Fouhey
Environmental Science & Technology | 2008
Molly S. Costanza-Robinson; Katherine H. Harrold; Ross M. Lieb-Lappen
Water Resources Research | 2002
Molly S. Costanza-Robinson; Mark L. Brusseau
Vadose Zone Journal | 2003
Mark L. Brusseau; Nicole T. Nelson; Molly S. Costanza-Robinson