PREDOMINANCE AND MINERAL STABILITY DIAGRAMS REVISITED
The easiest and most general way to do this is to use a numerical approach to identify the boundaries. This contrasts with the normal analytical approach - manipulation of simplified equations - that is used in the construction of classical predominance and stability diagrams (as every student of geochemistry knows!). A hunt and track algorithm is described that will do this. This is more efficient than the alternative grid or brute force approach.
Unlike the classical diagrams where some prior simplification of the system under consideration is usually undertaken, the new method can retain all the complexity inherent in the original system and so can be customised for specific situations. It is precisely in these complex situations that the new approach can provide a useful insight into the many interactions occurring. It also shows how the system might respond to changing conditions. Critically, the diagrams can include adsorbed species which frequently dominate the behaviour of trace metals in environmental systems and so should not be ignored.
Various examples will be shown based on this new approach using the USGS PHREEQC geochemical speciation code.