Application Of Dielectric Spectroscopy To The Detection Of Contamination In Sandstone

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
V. Saltas
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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6
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179 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2005

Abstract

The present work investigates whether dielectric spectroscopy can be used to detect contamination, which may appear in a natural porous material, due to the spreading of pollution. For this purpose, dielectric and conductivity measurements, in the frequency range of 10mHz to 1MHz, were carried out in sandstone samples, partially filled or saturated with solutions of leachates, at different concentrations. The experimental results suggest that although the role of water is dominant to the measured electrical conductivity, variations of two orders of magnitude are observed due to the different concentrations of leachates, in partially filled sandstone samples. Experimental data are well fitted with a Havriliak?Negami dielectric relaxation function, superimposed with a conductivity term. The parameters of the fitting function have been correlated to the concentration of leachate in the sandstone samples and considerable changes have been observed at low leachate?s concentration.
Citation

APA: V. Saltas  (2005)  Application Of Dielectric Spectroscopy To The Detection Of Contamination In Sandstone

MLA: V. Saltas Application Of Dielectric Spectroscopy To The Detection Of Contamination In Sandstone. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2005.

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