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Hydrochemistry of urban groundwater, Seoul, Korea: The impact of subway tunnels on groundwater quality

Authors
Chae, Gi-TakYun, Seong-TaekChoi, Byoung-YoungYu, Soon-YoungJo, Ho-YoungMayer, BernhardKim, Yun-JongLee, Jin-Yong
Issue Date
23-10월-2008
Publisher
ELSEVIER
Keywords
Urban groundwater; Subway tunnel seepage; Water quality; Hydrochemical modeling; Redox condition; Dissolved Mn and Fe
Citation
JOURNAL OF CONTAMINANT HYDROLOGY, v.101, no.1-4, pp.42 - 52
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF CONTAMINANT HYDROLOGY
Volume
101
Number
1-4
Start Page
42
End Page
52
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/122541
DOI
10.1016/j.jconhyd.2008.07.008
ISSN
0169-7722
Abstract
Hydrogeologic and hydrochemical data for subway tunnel seepage waters in Seoul (Republic of Korea) were examined to understand the effect of underground tunnels on the degradation of urban groundwater. A very large quantity of groundwater (up to 63 million m(3) year(-1)) is discharged into subway tunnels with a total length of 287 km, resulting in a significant drop of the local groundwater table and the abandonment of groundwater wells. For the tunnel seepage water samples (n=72) collected from 43 subway stations, at least one parameter among pathogenic microbes (total coliform, heterotrophic bacteria), dissolved Mn and Fe. NH4+, NO3-, turbidity, and color exceeded the Korean Drinking Water Standards. Locally, tunnel seepage water was enriched in dissolved Mn (avg. 0.70 mg L-1, max. 5.58 mg L-1), in addition to dissolved Fe, NH4+, and pathogenic microbes, likely due to significant inflow of sewage water from broken or leaking sewer pipes. Geochemical modeling of redox reactions was conducted to simulate the characteristic hydrochemistry of subway tunnel seepage. The results show that variations in the reducing conditions occur in urban groundwater, dependent upon the amount of organic matter-rich municipal sewage contaminating the aquifer. The organic matter facilitates the reduction and dissolution of Mn- and Fe-bearing solids in aquifers and/or tunnel construction materials, resulting in the successive increase of dissolved Mn and Fe. The present study clearly demonstrates that locally significant deterioration of urban groundwater is caused by a series of interlinked hydrogeologic and hydrochemical changes induced by underground tunnels. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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