RESUMO
The contaminant mass discharge is a relevant metric to evaluate the risk that a groundwater plume poses to water resources. However, this assessment is often vitiated by a high uncertainty inherent to the assessment method and often limited number of measurement points to carry out the assessment. Direct-Push techniques in combination with profiling tools and dedicated sampling can be an interesting alternative to increase the measurement point density and hence reduce the mass discharge uncertainty. The main objective of our study was to assess if DP logging and sampling could be employed to get a reasonable estimate of contaminant mass discharge in a large sulfonamide contaminant plume (> 1500 m wide), compared to a more traditional approach based on monitoring wells. To do so, an Hydraulic Profiling Tool (HPT) logging with a dedicated site calibration was used to estimate the hydraulic conductivity field. The sulfonamide concentrations were inferred from the compound fluorescence properties measured by laboratory spectrofluorometry (λEx / λEm = 255/340 nm) and a dedicated log-log linear regression model. Our results show that HPT-derived hydraulic conductivity values are in good agreement with the monitoring well results, and within the order of magnitude reported in similar studies or indirect geophysical techniques. Fluorescence appears as a powerful proxy for the sulfonamide concentration levels. Ultimately, the contaminant mass discharge estimate from HPT and fluorescence techniques lies within a factor 2 from the estimate by monitoring wells, with 549 [274-668] and 776 [695-879] kg/yr respectively. Overall, this study highlights that DP logging tools combined with indirect methods (correlation with fluorescence) could provide a relevant contaminant mass discharge estimate for some optically active substances, given that a proper calibration phase is carried out.