Ricardo Juncosa
University of A Coruña
39 Papers
123 Citations
Ricardo Juncosa is an academic researcher from University of A Coruña. The author has contributed to research in topics: Groundwater & Environmental science. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 38 publications.
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Papers
Injection of CO2-saturated water through a siliceous sandstone plug from the Hontomin test site (Spain): experiment and modeling.
TL;DR: The results suggest that mineral dissolution and microcracking may have acted in a synergistic way at the beginning of the acidic flooding, however, dissolution processes concentrated in pore throats can better explain the permeability enhancement observed over longer periods of time.
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Numerical modelling of seawater intrusion in Shenzhen (China) using a 3D density-dependent model including tidal effects
TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors presented a three-dimensional density-dependent numerical model developed with the FEFLOW code, which is aimed at simulating the extent of seawater intrusion while including tidal effects and different groundwater pumping scenarios.
Characterization of the water flow through concrete based on parameter estimation from infiltration tests
TL;DR: In this article, a new approach for the characterization of the flow parameters, either under saturated or partially saturated conditions, is presented, based on numerical back-analysis of simple and inexpensive infiltration tests.
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Final Disposal of the Wastes Associated with the Oil Spill of the Tanker Prestige through its Stabilization with Quicklime and Granite Fines
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focused on the stabilization of the raw oily wastes of the Prestige's oil spill using quicklime and granite sawdust, which is an inert waste of the local dimension stone industry.
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Hydrochemical Evolution of the filling of the Mining Lake of As Pontes (Spain)
TL;DR: The As Pontes lignite mine is located in northwest Spain, in the Galicia region as mentioned in this paper, and filling of the 547hm3 pit began at the end of January 2008 through the controlled input of surface water.
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