Electrical imaging (resistivity tomography) is increasingly used as a geophysical exploration technique in contaminated land research. The present work demonstrates the efficiency of electrical imaging in monitoring pollution plume evolution under both in-situ and model conditions. The in-situ campaign was done at an unlined landfill site situated in the city of Patras, Hellas. A partially saturated zone of alluvial fan deposits underlies the site, which retards leachate percolation to the underlying water table. Electrical imaging provided details of the internal structure of the waste tip, and confirmed the presence of a leachate plume beneath the base of the landfill. This field data component provided the constraints for the design of a generic model of contaminant infiltration into partially saturated sand. The aim was to study leachate plume evolution in a laboratory environment. For this purpose, a miniaturised resistivity tomography technique, developed at Cardiff University, was used to image the resistivity distribution before during and after contaminant infiltration. Comparison of resulting two-dimensional tomography with observed plume geometry at the end of the test showed the miniaturised electrical imaging technique to be highly effective. Experiment showed that contaminant evolution taking place in the model was gravity-driven, with capillary water in the vadose zone being displaced by the denser contaminant solution.
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