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Groundwater flow

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Groundwater flow Basic principles of GW Flow Porosity and effective porosity Total porosity is defined as the part of rock that's void space nT = Vv/VT = (VT Vs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Groundwater flow


1
Groundwater flow
2
Basic principles of GW Flow
  • Porosity and effective porosity
  • Total porosity is defined as the part of rock
    that's void space
  • nT Vv/VT (VT Vs)/VT
  • Vv void volume,
  • VT total volume
  • Vs solid volume
  • void ratio
  • e Vv/Vs
  • Primary porosity interstitial porosity (original
    in the rock)
  • Secondary porosity fracture or solution porosity
  • Primary porosity range from 26 to 47 (using
    different arrangements and packing of ideal
    spheres).

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Porosity of Sediments and Rocks
  • Depending on grain size, particle shape and
    arrangement, diagenetic features, actual values
    of porosity can range from zero or near zero to
    more than 60.
  • In general, for sedimentary rocks, the smaller
    the particle size, the higher the porosity.
  • Total porosity amount of pore space (does not
    require pore connection)
  • Effective porosity percentage of interconnected
    pore space available for groundwater flow.
  • Effective porosity can be one order of magnitude
    smaller than total porosity (difference greatest
    in fractured rocks).

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Measurement of porosity
  • In the lab, porosity is measured by taking a
    sample of known volume (V),
  • sample is dried in an oven at 105oC until it
    reaches a constant weight (expelling moisture).
  • Dried sample is then submerged in a known volume
    of water and allowed to remain in a sealed
    chamber until saturated
  • Volume of voids is equal to original water volume
    minus volume in the chamber after saturated
    sample is removed. Result is effective porosity.

8
  • Total porosity is found from
  • bulk density is mass of sample after dried
    divided by original sample volume, particle
    density is oven-dried mass divided by volume of
    solid determined from water-displacement test.
  • In most rocks and soils, particle density is
    about 2.65g/cc (2650kg/m3).

9
n 47.65
n 25.95
  1. Cubic packing of spheres
  2. Rhombohedral packing

10
  • Darcys Experimental Law
  • Darcy's Experimental Law
  • water was passed through a sand column and the
    volumetric flow rate Q was measured at the outlet
  • The cross-sectional area of the sand column was
    known, as was the length of the sand in the
    column. During the experiment, Darcy measured
    the distance between the water levels in the two
    manometers at various flow rates.
  • He tabulated Q, A, L , and (h1 - h2). He
    calculated Q/A and (h1-h2)/L. Q/A is a
    volumetric flow rate per unit surface area and is
    termed specific discharge.

11
Darcys Experimental Law (contd.)
  • Darcy's law is stated as
  • The velocity of flow is proportional to hydraulic
    gradient
  • Darcy's law is valid for flow through most
    granular material.
  • The law holds as long as flow is laminar.
  • In turbulent flow, water particles take more
    circuitous paths.
  • Darcy's velocity (q)
  • Darcy's q is a "superficial" velocity.
  • Actual velocity v is the volumetric flow rate per
    unit area of connected pore space.
  • Therefore, v q/ne (Ki/ne) , where neA is the
    effective area of flow and ne is the effective
    porosity. v is the linear velocity of
    groundwater. v is always larger than the
    superficial velocity and increases with
    decreasing effective porosity.

12
Henry Darcy
13
Other forms of Darcy's law
  • q Ki
  • Q KiA
  • v Ki/ne
  • v q/ne
  • v and q are both vector quantities (with
    magnitude and direction).

14
Darcys experiment
15
Darcys Law, contd.
  • Actual velocity (linear gw velocity)
  • v q / ne
  • ne effective porosity
  • Applicability of Darcys Law
  • Laminar flow
  • Turbulent flow

16
Applications of Darcys Law
  • Predict groundwater flow to a well
  • Predict rate and direction of contaminants
    movement
  • Estimate hydraulic head for different locations
    in an aquifer

17
Hydraulic Head
  • wl's are measured with reference to a common
    datum, taken arbitrarily at the base of the
    sample. Absolute values of wl elevations were of
    no concern to Darcy (only the difference between
    them). We are concerned here with the actual
    water level elevations and what they mean.
  • Manometers
  • devices to measure wl elevations in the lab
  • Piezometers
  • a tube or a pipe to measure wl elevations in
    field. It's open at top where measurements are
    taken, and open at bottom to facilitate entrance
    of water.
  • A common datum is sea level (elevation zero).

18
Hydraulic Head (contd.)
  • Total head is a function of
  • pressure head,
  • elevation head,
  • velocity head.
  • Bernoulli equation.
  • under conditions of steady flow, total energy of
    an incompressible fluid is constant at all
    positions along a flow path in a closed system.
    This may be written as

19
Hydraulic Head (contd.)
  • (total energy contained in the water)
  • g acceleration due to gravity
  • z elevation of base of piezometer
  • P pressure exerted by water column,
  • ? fluid (water) density
  • v velocity
  • Divide through by g to get (next slide)

20
Hydraulic Head (contd.)
  • Equation above describes total energy contained
    by the fluid.
  • 1st term energy of position
  • 2nd term energy due to sustained fluid pressure
  • 3rd term energy due to fluid movement

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  • elevation head, pressure head, velocity head
  • velocity head is ignored (slow movement)
  • Stated simply
  • total head (h) is the sum of elevation of the
    base of piezometer and length of water column in
    piezometer

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Example 3.1
  • gs elevation 1000 m
  • DTW 25 m
  • peizometer 50 m
  • Water density 1000 kg/m3
  • Find
  • Hydraulic head
  • Pressure head
  • pressure

25
Example 3.1
  • Solution
  • Hydraulic head
  • Pressure head
  • pressure

26
Hydraulic Gradient
  • Total head h hp z
  • Gradient change in head with distance
  • i dh / dx
  • in vector form, gradient may be written as
  • grad h ?h

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Hydraulic gradient (contd)
  • Equipotential lines
  • Lines of equal hh
  • Gradient contour interval/horizontal distance

h 120m
h 100m
h 80m
Direction of groundwater flow
Angle 90
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3-point problem
B
A
E
C
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Hydraulic conductivity and permeability
  • Hydraulic conductivity (K) is constant of
    proportionality in Darcys Experimnet
  • HC ease with which groundwater flows through the
    porous medium
  • Sands gravels high K
  • Clay shales low K
  • Units L/T e.g. m/d, ft/d, gpd/ft2

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Example 3.3
  • Groundwater flows through a buried valley aquifer
    with a cross sectional area of 1 x 106 ft2,and a
    length of 2x 104 ft.
  • Hydraulic head at gw entry 1000 ft
  • Hydraulic head at gw exit 960 ft
  • Groundwater discharge 1 x 105 ft3/day
  • whats HC of aquifer in ft/day, m/d.
  • If effective porosity 0.3, find the linear
    groundwater velocity.

35
Intrinsic Permeability
  • ?w density of water kg/m3
  • g accelration of gravity m/sec2
  • ? viscosity kg/(m.sec)
  • k intrinsic permeability m2
  • K hydraulic conductivity m/sec
  • 1 m2 104 cm2 1.013x1012 Darcy

36
Intrinsic Permeability
  • Example 3.4

37
Empirical Approaches for estimation
  • Hazen
  • Harleman

38
Grain-Size Distribution
39
Laboratory Measurements of K
  • Field Tests
  • Empirical relations
  • Lab measurements
  • Whats the most reliable?

40
Laboratory Measurements of K
  • Constant-head test
  • Falling-head test

41
Constant-Head Teast
42
Mapping Flow in Geological Systems
43
Mapping Flow in Geological Systems
44
Mapping Flow in Geological Systems
45
Mapping Flow in Geological Systems
46
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