Pinal Creek, Arizona receives an inflow of ground water with high dissolved inorganic carbon (57–75 mg/l) and low pH (5.8–6.3). There is an observed increase of in-stream pH from approximately 6.0–7.8 over the 3 km downstream of the point of groundwater inflow. We hypothesized that CO2 gas-exchange was the most important factor causing the pH increase in this stream–aquifer system. An existing transport model, for coupled ground water–surface water systems (OTIS), was modified to include carbonate equilibria and CO2 degassing, used to simulate alkalinity, total dissolved inorganic carbon (CT), and pH in Pinal Creek. Because of the non-linear relation between pH and CT, the modified transport model used the numerical iteration method to solve the non-linearity. The transport model parameters were determined by the injection of two tracers, bromide and propane. The resulting simulations of alkalinity, CT and pH reproduced, without fitting, the overall trends in downstream concentrations. A multi-parametric sensitivity analysis (MPSA) was used to identify the relative sensitivities of the predictions to six of the physical and chemical parameters used in the transport model. MPSA results implied that CT and pH in stream water were controlled by the mixing of ground water with stream water and CO2 degassing. The relative importance of these two processes varied spatially depending on the hydrologic conditions, such as stream flow velocity and whether a reach gained or lost stream water caused by the interaction with the ground water. The coupled transport model with CO2 degassing and generalized sensitivity analysis presented in this study can be applied to evaluate carbon transport and pH in other coupled stream–ground water systems.
Authors:Choi, J., Hulseapple, S.M., Conklin, M. H., and Harvey, J.W., 1998
Journal of Hydrology 209, pp. 297–310