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Article Abstract

The investigation of leachate leakage at numerous landfill sites is urgently needed. This study presents an exploration of environmental tracing methods using δH and δC-difference in dissolved carbon (δC) to localize leachate leak points at landfill sites. δH, δC, δC, δO, and an array of physicochemical indices (e.g., total dissolved solids, temperature, and oxidation reduction potential) were monitored in both leachate and groundwater from different zones of a landfill site in China during the year of 2021-2023. Moreover, data for these parameters (i.e., the isotopic composition and physicochemical indices) from twelve published landfill cases were also collected, and these groundwater/leachate data points were located within 1 km away from the landfill boundary. Then statistical analyses, such as Pearson correlation analysis and redundancy analysis (RDA), were performed using both the detected and collected parameters at landfill sites. Consequently, the intensity of interaction between leachate and background groundwater was found to significantly control the isotopic fractionation features of hydrogen and carbon, and both the content of major contamination indicators (total dissolved solids, chemical oxygen demand, and ammoniacal nitrogen) and the oxidation reduction potential were the key impact factors. Accordingly, the water type used to indicate leachate leakage points was determined to be leachate that significantly interacted with the background groundwater or precipitation (LBGP). δH showed a perfect linear correlation (0.81 ≤ r < 1.0) with δC in leachate under highly anaerobic landfill conditions, and the δH & δC combinations in the LBGP were significantly different from those in the other water types. For groundwater with total dissolved solids lower than 1400 mg/L at landfill sites, a strong positive linear correlation (r = 0.83) was revealed between δC and δC. Based on these insights, δH versus δC plots and RDA using δH and δC as response variables were proposed to localize leak points at both lined landfills and leachate facilities. These findings further understanding of the isotopic fractionation features of hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen and provide novel environmental tracer methods for investigating leachate leak points at MSW landfill sites.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173654DOI Listing

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