Sources of groundwater salinity and potential impact on arsenic mobility in the western Hetao Basin, Inner Mongolia

Jia, Y; Guo, H; Xi, B; Jiang, Y; Zhang, Z; Yuan, R; Yi, W; Xue, X

HERO ID

4242006

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2017

Language

English

PMID

28577404

HERO ID 4242006
In Press No
Year 2017
Title Sources of groundwater salinity and potential impact on arsenic mobility in the western Hetao Basin, Inner Mongolia
Authors Jia, Y; Guo, H; Xi, B; Jiang, Y; Zhang, Z; Yuan, R; Yi, W; Xue, X
Journal Science of the Total Environment
Volume 601-602
Page Numbers 691-702
Abstract The quality of groundwater used for human consumption and irrigation in the Hetao Basin of Inner Mongolia, China is affected by elevated salinity as well as high arsenic (As) concentrations. However, the origin of high salinity and its potential impact on As mobility in the Basin remain unclear. This study explores both issues using stable isotopic compositions and Cl/Br ratios of groundwater as well as the major ions of both groundwater and leachable salts in aquifer sediments. Limited variations in δ18O and δ2H (-11.13 to -8.10, -82.23 to -65.67) with the wide range of Total Dissolved Solid (TDS, 351-6734mg/L) suggest less contribution of direct evaporation to major salinity in groundwater. Deuterium excess shows that non-direct evaporation (capillary evaporation, transpiration) and mineral/evaporite dissolution contribute to >60% salinity in groundwater with TDS>1000mg/L. Non-direct evaporation, like capillary evaporation and transpiration, is proposed as important processes contributing to groundwater salinity based on Cl/Br ratio and halite dissolution line. The chemical weathering of Ca, Mg minerals and evaporites (Na2SO4and CaSO4) input salts into groundwater as well. This is evidenced by the fact that lacustrine environment and the arid climate prevails in Pleistocene period. Dissolution of sulfate salts not only promotes groundwater salinity but affects As mobilization. Due to the dissolution of sulfate salts and non-direct evaporation, groundwater SO42-prevails and its reduction may enhance As enrichment. The higher As concentrations (300-553μg/L) are found at the stronger SO42-reduction stage, indicating that reduction of Fe oxide minerals possibly results from HS-produced by SO42-reduction. This would have a profound impact on As mobilization since sulfate is abundant in groundwater and sediments. The evolution of groundwater As and salinity in the future should be further studied in order to ensure sustainable utilization of water resource in this water scarce area.
Doi 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.05.196
Pmid 28577404
Wosid WOS:000406294900068
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English