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Using chloride as a conservative tracer to define mixing proportions
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Topic: Using chloride as a conservative tracer to define mixing proportions (Read 130 times)
pknappet
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Posts: 1
Using chloride as a conservative tracer to define mixing proportions
«
on:
May 17, 2023, 10:15:27 PM »
Hi, I have two waters mixing in a riverbank and I want to use chloride concentrations to define the mixing proportions between river water and the groundwater end-member to assess the mass transfers that occurred between phases and the aqueous solution while accounting for this dilution effect. I see that PHREEQC prefers to calculate the mixing proportions on its own, but is there a way to define these. Currently it doesn't like that I have chloride as a solute that is not included in any phases, but that is not why I have chloride in the model.
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dlparkhurst
Top Contributor
Posts: 3088
Re: Using chloride as a conservative tracer to define mixing proportions
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Reply #1 on:
May 18, 2023, 03:03:59 AM »
Are you using INVERSE_MODELING? If you are, you should include Cl in the -balances section so that PHREEQC will include a mole balance equation. By default, only elements included in the phases are given mole-balance equations, so Cl is not included. Adding -balances; Cl will allow the solutions to mix to account for the Cl, and Cl will be included in the charge-balance part of the calculation.
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Using chloride as a conservative tracer to define mixing proportions