Sowmitri Tarimala
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Sowmitri Tarimala.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2013
Amr I. Abdel-Fattah; Dongxu Zhou; Hakim Boukhalfa; Sowmitri Tarimala; S. Doug Ware; Arturo A. Keller
Subsurface transport of plutonium (Pu) may be facilitated by the formation of intrinsic Pu colloids. While this colloid-facilitated transport is largely governed by the electrokinetic properties and dispersion stability (resistance to aggregation) of the colloids, reported experimental data is scarce. Here, we quantify the dependence of ζ-potential of intrinsic Pu(IV) colloids on pH and their aggregation rate on ionic strength. Results indicate an isoelectric point of pH 8.6 and a critical coagulation concentration of 0.1 M of 1:1 electrolyte at pH 11.4. The ζ-potential/pH dependence of the Pu(IV) colloids is similar to that of goethite and hematite colloids. Colloid interaction energy calculations using these values reveal an effective Hamaker constant of the intrinsic Pu(IV) colloids in water of 1.85 × 10(-19) J, corresponding to a relative permittivity of 6.21 and refractive index of 2.33, in agreement with first principles calculations. This relatively high Hamaker constant combined with the positive charge of Pu(IV) colloids under typical groundwater aquifer conditions led to two contradicting hypotheses: (a) the Pu(IV) colloids will exhibit significant aggregation and deposition, leading to a negligible subsurface transport or (b) the Pu(IV) colloids will associate with the relatively stable native groundwater colloids, leading to a considerable subsurface transport. Packed column transport experiments supported the second hypothesis.
Langmuir | 2010
Richard Edward Beckham; Amr I. Abdel-Fattah; Peter M. Roberts; Reem Ibrahim; Sowmitri Tarimala
Naturally occurring seismic events and artificially generated low-frequency (1 to 500 Hz) elastic waves have been observed to alter the production rates of oil and water wells, sometimes increasing and sometimes decreasing production, and to influence the turbidity of surface and well water. The decreases in production are of particular concern, especially when artificially generated elastic waves are applied as a method for enhanced oil recovery. The exact conditions that result in a decrease in production remain unknown. Although the underlying environment is certainly complex, the observed increase in water well turbidity after natural seismic events suggests the existence of a mechanism that can affect both the subsurface flow paths and the mobilization of in situ colloidal particles. This article explores the macroscopic and microscopic effects of low-frequency dynamic stress stimulations on the release of colloidal particles from an analog core representing an infinitesimal section along the propagation paths of an elastic wave. Experiments on a column packed with 1 mm borosilicate beads and loaded with polystyrene microparticles demonstrate that axial mechanical stress oscillations enhance the mobilization of captured microparticles. Increasing the amplitude of the oscillations increases the number of microparticles released and can also result in cyclical spikes in effluent microparticle concentration during stimulation. Under a prolonged period of stimulation, the cyclical effluent spikes coincided with fluctuations in the column pressure data and continued at a diminished level after stimulation. This behavior can be attributed to rearrangements of the beads in the column, resulting in possible changes in the void space and/or tortuosity of the packing. Optical microscopy observations of the beads during low-frequency oscillations reveal that individual beads rotate, thereby rubbing against each other and scraping away portions of the adsorbed microparticles. These results support the theory that mechanical interactions between porous matrix grains are important mechanisms in flow path alteration and the mobilization of naturally occurring colloidal particles during elastic wave stimulation. These results also point to both continuous and discrete en masse releases of colloidal particles, perhaps because of circulation cells within the packing material.
Archive | 2016
Schön S. Levy; Steven J. Goldstein; Amr I. Abdel-Fattah; Ronald S. Amato; Elizabeth Y. Anthony; Paul J. Cook; Patrick F. Dobson; Mostafa Fayek; Diana French; Rodrigo de la Garza; Teamrat A. Ghezzehei; Philip C. Goodell; Steven H. Harder; Teh-Lung Ku; Shangde Luo; Michael T. Murrell; Andrew J. Nunn; Ronald Oliver; Katrina Pekar-Carpenter; Michael Sean Rearick; Minghua Ren; Ignacio Reyes-Cortes; Jose Alfredo Pineda; George Saulnier; Sowmitri Tarimala; John Walton
The Pena Blanca region, 50 km north of Chihuahua City, Chihuahua, Mexico, was a target of uranium exploration and mining by the Mexican government. After mining ceased in 1981, researchers became interested in this region as a study area for subsurface uranium migration with relevance to geologic disposal of nuclear waste. Many studies related to this concept were conducted at the Nopal I mine site located on a cuesta (hill) of the Sierra Pena Blanca. This site has geologic, tectonic, hydrologic, and geochemical similarities to Yucca Mountain, Nevada, a formerly proposed site for a high-level nuclear-waste repository in the unsaturated zone. The U.S. Department of Energy (U.S. DOE), Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management (OCRWM), sponsored studies at Nopal I in the 1990s and supported the drilling of three research wells – PB1, PB2, and PB3 – at the site in 2003. Beginning in 2004, the Pena Blanca Natural Analogue Project was undertaken by U.S. DOE, OCRWM to develop a three-dimensional conceptual model of the transport of uranium and its radiogenic daughter products at the Nopal I site.
Archive | 2010
Mark L. Porter; Qinjun Kang; Sowmitri Tarimala; Amr I Abdel Fattah; Scott Backhaus; James William Carey
Archive | 2010
Mark L. Porter; Qinjun Kang; Sowmitri Tarimala; Amr I. Abdel-Fattah; Sigrid Backhaus; James William Carey
Archive | 2010
Amr I. Abdel-Fattah; Peter M. Roberts; Sowmitri Tarimala; Reem Ibrahim; Richard Edward Beckham
Archive | 2009
Richard Edward Beckham; Sowmitri Tarimala; Philip Roberts; Amr I. Abdel-Fattah
Archive | 2008
Richard Edward Beckham; Amr I. Abdel-Fattah; Philip Roberts; Rosziati Ibrahim; Sowmitri Tarimala
Archive | 2008
Sowmitri Tarimala; Amr I. Abdel-Fattah; Qinjun Kang; Harish Viswanathan; Kevin William Connington
Archive | 2008
Amr I. Abdel-Fattah; Sowmitri Tarimala; Philip Roberts