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Dye tracing
Dye tracing
from Wikipedia

Dye tracing is a method of tracking and tracing various flows using dye as a flow tracer when added to a liquid. Dye tracing may be used to analyse the flow of the liquid or the transport of objects within the liquid. Dye tracking may be either qualitative, showing the presence of a particular flow, or quantitative, when the amount of the traced dye is measured by special instruments.

Fluorescent dyes

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Fluorescein in ammonia solution (2)

Fluorescent dyes are often used in situations where there is insufficient lighting (e.g., sewers or cave waters), and where precise quantitative data are required (measured by a fluorometer).

In 1871, fluorescein was among the first fluorescent dyes to be developed. Its disodium salt (under the trademark "uranine") was developed several years later and still remains among the best tracer dyes.[1]

Other popular tracer dyes are rhodamine, pyranine and sulforhodamine B.

Quantitative tracing

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Carbon sampling was the first method of technology-assisted dye tracing that was based on the absorption of dye in charcoal. Charcoal packets may be placed along the expected route of the flow, later the collected dye may be chemically extracted and its amount subjectively evaluated.

Filter fluorometers were the first devices that could detect dye concentrations beyond human eye sensitivity.

Spectrofluorometers, developed in the mid-1980s, made it possible to perform advanced analysis of fluorescence.

Filter fluorometers and spectrofluorometers identify the intensity of fluorescence that is present in a liquid sample. Different dyes and chemicals produce a distinctive wavelength that is determined during analysis.

Tracing methods

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Each sampling area is analysed by a quantitative instrument to test the background fluorescence.

Each different type of dye has significant performance factors that distinguish them in different environments. These performance factors include:

  • Resistance to absorption
  • Surface water loss
  • Limitations of use in acidic waters

Depending on the environment, water flows possess certain factors that can affect how a dye performs. Natural fluorescence in a water flow can interfere with certain dyes. The presence of organic material, other chemicals, and sunlight can affect the intensity of dyes.

Applications

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Water tracing

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Typical applications of water flow tracing include:[2]

Medicine and biology

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Dye tracing may be used for the analysis of blood circulation within various parts of the human or animal body. For example, fluorescent angiography, a technique of analysis of circulation in retina is used for diagnosing various eye diseases.

With modern fluorometers, capable of tracking single fluorescent molecules, it is possible to track migrations of single cells tagged by a fluorescent molecule (see fluorescein in biological research). For example, the fluorescent-activated cell sorting in flow cytometry makes it possible to sort out the cells with attached fluorescent molecules from a flow.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Dye tracing is a hydrogeological technique that employs the injection of dyes, typically fluorescent, into groundwater or surface water systems to track flow paths, velocities, and connections between recharge and discharge points, particularly in karst aquifers where subsurface conduits dominate flow. By detecting the dyes at downstream outlets such as springs, wells, or caves using fluorometers or passive receptors, researchers can map hydrological networks and quantify transport dynamics without invasive infrastructure. The method originated in the late 19th century but gained prominence in the mid-20th century for studying complex aquifer systems, evolving from qualitative visual detections to sophisticated quantitative analyses involving automated sampling and concentration measurements. Commonly used dyes, such as fluorescein (yellow-green under UV light) and rhodamine WT (red), are environmentally benign at trace levels and selected for their stability, solubility, and detectability down to parts-per-billion concentrations. Qualitative applications focus on confirming point-to-point linkages, while quantitative variants calculate parameters like linear velocity, ranging from a few feet per day in diffuse flow to thousands of feet per day in karst conduits, and dispersion, aiding predictive modeling of solute movement. Beyond groundwater studies, dye tracing supports environmental management by delineating pollution pathways from sinks or streams to drinking water sources, as demonstrated in national park aquifers and urban recharge zones. It has been instrumental in karst regions worldwide, including the Edwards Aquifer in Texas and the Madison Aquifer in South Dakota, where traces reveal rapid transit times (hours to days) and inform policies on land use and contaminant mitigation. Advances in portable fluorometers have enhanced field efficiency, enabling real-time monitoring in remote or dynamic environments.

Introduction

Definition and Principles

Dye tracing is a technique used to track and visualize the movement of fluids, particularly water, by introducing dyes that serve as passive tracers. These dyes are added to the liquid in small quantities to mimic the transport of non-reactive substances without significantly altering the flow properties or chemical composition of the fluid. This method is widely applied in hydrology and fluid dynamics to study flow pathways, velocities, and dispersion patterns in subsurface environments, rivers, and other water systems. The core principles of dye tracing rely on the dyes functioning as conservative tracers under ideal conditions, meaning they remain non-reactive, non-sorbing, and non-degrading, thereby following the advection-dominated transport of the fluid. Advection refers to the bulk movement of the dye with the mean flow velocity, while dispersion arises from variations in flow paths and velocities, spreading the dye plume. Detection occurs through visual observation for qualitative assessment, or quantitative methods such as spectrophotometry for absorbance-based dyes and fluorometry for fluorescent ones, which offer high sensitivity down to parts per billion. Compared to isotopic or chemical tracers, dyes provide advantages including low cost, high visibility for immediate feedback, ease of handling, and straightforward quantification without specialized equipment in many cases. In a basic setup, dye is injected instantaneously or continuously at a known source point, such as a well or stream inlet, in a measured mass or concentration. Downstream sampling or in-situ observation captures the tracer's arrival, allowing analysis of key parameters: the first arrival time indicates mean flow velocity, peak concentration reflects dilution, and the temporal spread of the breakthrough curve quantifies longitudinal dispersion. This approach assumes one-dimensional flow for simplification, though multidimensional effects may require adjustments. However, deviations from ideal conservative behavior can occur due to adsorption of dye molecules onto soil particles or conduit surfaces, which retards transport; photodegradation under sunlight exposure, reducing detectability; and excessive dilution in highly turbulent flows, where mixing broadens the plume beyond measurable limits. These limitations necessitate careful selection of dyes and conditions to ensure reliable tracing. The transport of dye concentration C(x,t)C(x,t) in one-dimensional flow is commonly modeled by the advection-dispersion equation, whose analytical solution for an instantaneous point source injection in an infinite domain is: C(x,t)=MA4πDtexp[(xut)24Dt]C(x,t) = \frac{M}{A \sqrt{4\pi D t}} \exp\left[ -\frac{(x - u t)^2}{4 D t} \right]
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