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Featured researches published by Robert E. Broshears.


Environmental Science & Technology | 1994

Coupling of hydrologic transport and chemical reactions in a stream affected by Acid mine drainage.

Briant A. Kimball; Robert E. Broshears; Kenneth E. Bencala; Diane M. McKnight

Experiments in St. Kevin Gulch, an acid mine drainage stream, examined the coupling of hydrologic transport to chemical reactions affecting metal concentrations. Injection of LiCl as a conservative tracer was used to determine discharge and residence time along a 1497-m reach. Transport of metals downstream from inflows of acidic, metal-rich water was evaluated based on synoptic samples of metal concentrations and the hydrologic characteristics of the stream. Transport of SO4 and Mn was generally conservative, but in the subreaches most affected by acidic inflows, transport was reactive. Both 0.1-pm filtered and particulate Fe were reactive over most of the stream reach. Filtered A1 partitioned to the particulate phase in response to high instream concentrations. Simulations that accounted for the removal of Sod, Mn, Fe, and A1 with firstorder reactions reproduced the steady-state profiles. The calculated rate constants for net removal used in the simulations embody several processes that occur on a stream-reach scale. The comparison between rates of hydrologic transport and chemical reactions indicates that reactions are only important over short distances in the stream near the acidic inflows, where reactions occur on a comparable time scale with hydrologic transport and thus affect metal concentrations.


Water Resources Research | 1996

Reactive Solute Transport in Streams: 1. Development of an Equilibrium‐Based Model

Robert L. Runkel; Kenneth E. Bencala; Robert E. Broshears; Steven C. Chapra

An equilibrium-based solute transport model is developed for the simulation of trace metal fate and transport in streams. The model is formed by coupling a solute transport model with a chemical equilibrium submodel based on MINTEQ. The solute transport model considers the physical processes of advection, dispersion, lateral inflow, and transient storage, while the equilibrium submodel considers the speciation and complexation of aqueous species, precipitation/dissolution and sorption. Within the model, reactions in the water column may result in the formation of solid phases (precipitates and sorbed species) that are subject to downstream transport and settling processes. Solid phases on the streambed may also interact with the water column through dissolution and sorption/desorption reactions. Consideration of both mobile (water-borne) and immobile (streambed) solid phases requires a unique set of governing differential equations and solution techniques that are developed herein. The partial differential equations describing physical transport and the algebraic equations describing chemical equilibria are coupled using the sequential iteration approach.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2012

Evaluating remedial alternatives for an acid mine drainage stream: a model post audit.

Robert L. Runkel; Briant A. Kimball; Katherine Walton-Day; Philip L. Verplanck; Robert E. Broshears

A post audit for a reactive transport model used to evaluate acid mine drainage treatment systems is presented herein. The post audit is based on a paired synoptic approach in which hydrogeochemical data are collected at low (existing conditions) and elevated (following treatment) pH. Data obtained under existing, low-pH conditions are used for calibration, and the resultant model is used to predict metal concentrations observed following treatment. Predictions for Al, As, Fe, H(+), and Pb accurately reproduce the observed reduction in dissolved concentrations afforded by the treatment system, and the information provided in regard to standard attainment is also accurate (predictions correctly indicate attainment or nonattainment of water quality standards for 19 of 25 cases). Errors associated with Cd, Cu, and Zn are attributed to misspecification of sorbent mass (precipitated Fe). In addition to these specific results, the post audit provides insight in regard to calibration and sensitivity analysis that is contrary to conventional wisdom. Steps taken during the calibration process to improve simulations of As sorption were ultimately detrimental to the predictive results, for example, and the sensitivity analysis failed to bracket observed metal concentrations.


Limnology and Oceanography | 1995

Phosphate dynamics in an acidic mountain stream: Interactions involving algal uptake, sorption by iron oxide, and photoreduction

Cathy M. Tate; Robert E. Broshears; Diane M. McKnight


Environmental Science & Technology | 1996

Reactive Solute Transport in an Acidic Stream: Experimental pH Increase and Simulation of Controls on pH, Aluminum, and Iron

Robert E. Broshears; Robert L. Runkel; Briant A. Kimball; Diane M. McKnight; Kenneth E. Bencala


Water-Resources Investigations Report | 1993

Tracer-dilution experiments and solute-transport simulations for a mountain stream, Saint Kevin Gulch, Colorado

Robert E. Broshears; Kenneth E. Bencala; Briant A. Kimball; Diane M. McKnight


Archive | 1991

One-Dimensional Transport with Inflow and Storage (OTIS): A Solute Transport Model for Small Streams

Robert L. Runkel; Robert E. Broshears


Environmental Science & Technology | 1992

Partitioning behavior and the mobility of chlordane in groundwater

Linda R. Johnson-Logan; Robert E. Broshears; Stephen J. Klaine


Archive | 1993

Effects of Instream pH Modification on Transport of Sulfide-Oxidation Products

Briant A. Kimball; Robert E. Broshears; Diane M. McKnight; Kenneth E. Bencala


Archive | 1995

Phosphate dynamics in an acidic mountain stream: interactions involving algal uptake

Cathy M. Tate; Robert E. Broshears; Diane M. McKnight

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Diane M. McKnight

University of Colorado Boulder

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Briant A. Kimball

United States Geological Survey

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Kenneth E. Bencala

United States Geological Survey

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Robert L. Runkel

United States Geological Survey

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Cathy M. Tate

United States Geological Survey

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Katherine Walton-Day

United States Geological Survey

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Philip L. Verplanck

United States Geological Survey

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Steven C. Chapra

University of Colorado Boulder

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