Hydraulic Profiling Tool for Groundwater Vulnerability Assessment at an MSW Landfill
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Characterization of the unsaturated zone below an MSW landfill is critical to evaluate the groundwater pollution vulnerability assessment. The permeability of the soil in the unsaturated zone, the depth of the water table, and the quality of pore water in the soil can provide a reliable site-specific estimate of pollution vulnerability. To evaluate these factors, an attempt was made to use the hydraulic profiling tool (HPT) in the unsaturated zone below a non-engineered MSW landfill in Delhi. HPT was equipped with an injection logger capable of qualitatively measuring permeability at the cm scale and an electrical conductivity (EC) dipole that measures the bulk soil conductivity. HPT findings were compared with piezocone penetration tests (CPTu) and the electrical conductivity of extracted pore water from the soil cores. The results indicate that pressure from the injection logger works effectively for medium/fine sand and silt and has greater sensitivity to permeability changes for these soils than CPTu. Pore-water EC was found to have a good correlation with volumetric water content and EC from HPT. A groundwater vulnerability matrix was conceptualized using factors based on the time of leachate travel and maximum pore-water EC observed, both derived from HPT, and risk scores were assigned from 1-5, corresponding to the 9 zones of the matrix. The locations surveyed at the dumpsite received scores of 4 and 5, which depicts high vulnerability. The results indicate that HPT can be used for rapid site-specific groundwater vulnerability assessments.