Abstract
ABSTRACT
This paper describes a stochastic methodology for modeling contaminant transport to determine the risk of potential human exposure to toxic chemicals in a heterogenous contaminated aquifer. The Sequential Gaussian Simulation (SGS) method is used to generate random hydraulic conductivity fields. Statistical sampling of hydraulic conductivity fields is based on Monte Carlo simple random sampling. An optimum number of Monte Carlo runs is calculated for a single uncertain groundwater parameter, hydraulic conductivity, using several approaches. The magnitude of human exposure via the ingestion of contaminated groundwater from a well is calculated considering the probabilistic distribution of the hydraulic conductivity results derived from a numerically modeled contaminant concentration profile. This research shows that in exposure assessment, choosing the appropriate number of Monte Carlo simulations can be very critical. The number of simulations should be well justified and should guarantee convergence toward a stable statistical distribution of the output.
Key words:
Exposure assessment; groundwater contamination; sequential Gaussian simulations; spatial variability; stochastic modeling; risk assessment
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