Groundwater Flow over Larger Volumes of Rock: Cross-Hole Hydraulic - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

groundwater flow over larger volumes of rock cross hole
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Groundwater Flow over Larger Volumes of Rock: Cross-Hole Hydraulic - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Groundwater Flow over Larger Volumes of Rock: Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing Claire Tiedeman, USGS USEPA-USGS Fractured Rock Workshop EPA Region 10 September 11-12 2019 Purpose of Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing (also called aquifer testing, pump


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Groundwater Flow over Larger Volumes of Rock: Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing

USEPA-USGS Fractured Rock Workshop EPA Region 10 September 11-12 2019

Claire Tiedeman, USGS

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¥ Identify hydraulic connections and

barriers between boreholes.

¥ Use of this info with geologic

framework helps identify locations

  • f permeable high-K fractures and

lower-K rocks.

¥ This characterization data is critical

to developing the site conceptual model.

¥ Quantitative analysis of test data

helps refine the conceptual model and reduce its uncertainty.

Purpose of Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing

(also called aquifer testing, pump testing)

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 2

Fast Response No Response

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¥ In fractured rocks,

hydraulic responses can travel long distances in short times.

¥ Drawdown will not

necessarily decrease with distance from pumped well.

Expectations: Cross-Hole Hydraulic Tests

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 3

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¥ Borehole locations

¥ Difficult to predict distances over which

permeable fractures are connected, prior to drilling wells.

¥ à Use multiple criteria when selecting locations

  • f new wells – e.g., value for characterizing

contaminant distribution and chemical transport as well as groundwater hydraulics. ¥ Creating separate vertical borehole

intervals

¥ For long open boreholes, important to install

packers, or liner, to isolate permeable fractures from each other.

¥ Use borehole geophysics & T profiling results to

guide design of monitoring intervals.

Designing Hydraulic Tests

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 4

Pump

Zones of permeable fractures

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¥ Considerations:

¥ Pump at a large enough rate to produce a

high signal to noise ratio at observation locations.

¥ But: pumping rates may be limited by

fracture permeability in pumped interval.

¥ Monitor water levels in as many wells

and intervals as possible.

¥ Detection of water-level responses in

the connected, high-permeability fracture network may occur rapidly (seconds) after onset of test.

Designing Hydraulic Tests

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 5

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¥ In heterogeneous

fractured rock aquifers, analytical solutions for estimating K or T from hydraulic tests have limited applicability.

¥ Best to use numerical

model (e.g. MODFLOW) so that heterogeneity can be properly represented.

Analyzing Cross-Hole Hydraulic Test Data

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 6

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¥

Enables consistent synthesis of site characterization data – geology, geophysics, hydraulics.

¥

Process of developing and calibrating gw flow model helps advance the 3D hydrogeologic conceptual model – e.g., identifying the network of permeable fractures.

¥

Model can be refined as new data are collected.

¥

Model for analyzing hydraulic tests can then be used to design and evaluate remedies, e.g.:

¥

Design well locations and pumping rates for achieving hydraulic containment.

¥

Analyze capture zones of wells

¥

Design strategies for injecting amendments for bioremediation

¥

Evaluate contaminant mass fluxes, using groundwater fluxes quantified by the model

Value of Modeling for Analyzing Hydraulic Test Data

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 7

Hydraulic Conductivity Representation Simulated Drawdown

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¥ Compared to unconsolidated aquifers:

¥ Lower density of boreholes and of depth-

discrete monitoring locations

¥ More complex field equipment needed– e.g.

packers for dividing open-hole wells.

¥ Low permeabilities may limit spatial

extent of measurable drawdowns.

¥ Interpretations will likely be non-unique.

Consider:

¥ Alternative conceptual models. ¥ Estimating uncertainty in model parameters. ¥ Carrying uncertainties/alternative models

through in any predictive analyses.

Limitations / Difficulties of Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing in Fractured Rocks

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 8

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¥ Packers divide

boreholes into 2 or 3 intervals.

¥ Packer placement

guided by T profiling results.

¥ Pump 10 L/min for

3.3 days.

Cross-Hole Test in Fractured Schist

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30 m

No vert exag

(Hsieh et al. 1999; Hsieh 2000)

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing

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¥ Observed Drawdown:

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Show observed drawdowns I 30 m I II II III III IV IV I II II III IV

Cross-Hole Test in Fractured Schist

(Hsieh et al. 1999; Hsieh 2000)

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing

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¥ Observed Drawdown:

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Show observed drawdowns I II III IV I II III IV

Cross-Hole Test in Fractured Schist

¥ Conceptual Model:

(Hsieh et al. 1999; Hsieh 2000)

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing

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Analysis With Simple Numerical Model

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Show observed drawdowns (Hsieh et al. 1999; Hsieh 2000)

¥ Simple numerical model:

¥ Confirms conceptual model ¥ Captures primary heterogeneities ¥ Is basis for transport model ¥ Not unique ¥ Has uncertainties

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing

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Analysis With Simple Numerical Model

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¥ 3D view of

model

(Hsieh et al. 1999; Hsieh 2000)

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing

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¥ Procedure:

¥ Shut down pump in one well of the P&T

system.

¥ Monitor water-level rises in obs wells. ¥ Conduct relatively short tests (run test

during the day, with overnight recovery)

¥ Repeat for all pumping wells of system

¥ Advantages

¥ No additional contaminated water

withdrawn

¥ Short tests limit effect of shutdown

  • n offsite contaminant migration

Using Existing Pump & Treat System for Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 14

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Well Shutdown Testing in Sedimentary Rocks

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1st Day: Shut down 45BR 2nd Day: Shut down 56BR 3rd Day: Shut down 15BR rain

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24BR open to bed ‘301’

Well Shutdown Testing in Sedimentary Rocks

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 16

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Well Shutdown Testing in Sedimentary Rocks: Analysis

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 17

¥ Use geologic framework and

qualitative analysis of shutdown tests to guide model construction.

¥ Hydraulic connections and

barriers evident from the data help identify which mudstone beds are high-K and which are low-K.

Hydraulic Conductivity Representation Geologic Framework

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Well Shutdown Testing in Sedimentary Rocks: Analysis

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 18

¥ Calibrate model to water-level rise

data

¥ Use model to simulate:

¥ GW flow in system with all P&T wells

pumping

¥ Pumping well capture regions

¥ Simulated GW fluxes and flow

paths important for:

¥ Simulating contaminant transport ¥ Designing & evaluating remediation

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¥ Valuable for identifying:

¥ Possible paths for relatively rapid contaminant transport ¥ Less permeable volumes of rock where slow advection and

diffusion likely dominate transport

¥ Interpreting hydraulic test data:

¥ Apply models! Use geology! Incorporate heterogeneity! ¥ Presence of permeable high-angle fractures might be inferred

from data, but can be difficult to identify their locations

¥ Be aware of limitations – nonuniqueness, uncertainty

¥ Tracer testing provides more definitive characterization

  • f transport paths and processes

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Tests in Fractured Rocks: Final Thoughts

Cross-Hole Hydraulic Testing 19