Data acquisition
Description of methods to obtain relevant parameters
Contents
Hydraulic parameters
Aquifer tests
Pumping tests
Pumping tests are very useful to characterize the local hydrogeology at a contaminated site. Usually, a well is pumped with a high pumping rate and the drawdown behavior (head changes) in the pumping well and (if available) in neighboring observation wells is measured. This can be done with manual head measurements, if the hydraulic head changes relatively slow. Fractured aquifers have, however, often a high hydraulic conductivity and the drawdown happens quickly, which makes it hard to manually measure the drawdown caused by the pumping. In this case, the head changes can be monitored with programmable pressure transducers (divers), which measure the hydraulic heads at a high measurement frequency (2 measurements per seconds or even more are recommended for fracture-flow dominated aquifers). Pumping in borehole, observation of head changes, interpretation with a suitable tool (e.g. Aqtesolv). Long-term pumping with high pumping rate
Location of screen matters. Measurement with high frequency for high-conductive layers.
Slug tests
Slug tests are relatively cheap and easy single-borehole aquifer tests, where the water table in a borehole is abruptly changed (e.g. by releasing a slug of water into the borehole) and the pressure response, when the water table changes back to its original state, is monitored. Therefore, the hydraulic head has to be measured. This can be done with manual measurements using common dip-meters or with automated measurements with pressure transducers. If the hydraulic conductivity close to the borehole is high (f.e. in a heavily fractured aquifer), the recovery happens very fast and it is necessary to have automated measurements.
The interpretation of slug tests allows for obtaining information about the local hydraulic conductivity. Note that slug tests usually affect only a small volume around a borehole and the determined parameters are valid for this volume. Furthermore, they can be influenced by the borehole filling (gravel or sand pack around the well screens).
If several boreholes are close by or if there are boreholes with several well screens at different depth, slug testing can yield some information about the local variability of the hydraulic conductivity.
There are different types of slug tests. A main distinction can be done between rising-head and falling-head slug tests.
- Falling-head slug test
For a falling-head slug test, the water level in the borehole is abruptly increased. This can be done on different ways. Water can be added in a slug into the borehole. A method which is particularly useful for aquifers with a high hydraulic conductivity (such as fractured limestone aquifers) is to apply a vacuum on the borehole in order to pull up the water table. The vacuum is released and the equilibration of the water table can be interpreted.
- Rising-head slug test
For a rising-head slug test, water is removed from the borehole and the recovery of the water level is recorded afterwards.
Additional information: Interpretation of water works data and remediation systems
Water works can offer the opportunity of getting cheap pump test data. Usually, they are operating one or several wells, where loggers monitor the water table levels. We show an example, where the water works in Fløng operates an alternating pumping scheme in 4 drinking water wells. Therefore, a high measurement frequency was set for the head logging. When the pumps are switched on and off, drawdown and recovery curves are obtained and can be analyzed.
Transport parameters
Tracer test, poroperm measurements from cores etc.
Fracture characterization
Fractures are usually described by their aperture, spacing, distribution, length and height and their main orientation. Information about the fracture geometry and location is generally scarce and it is challenging to determine appropriate parameters.
When open boreholes (without well screen) are available, optical and acoustical televiewers can be used to analyze the borehole walls. With vertical boreholes, mainly horizontal fractures can be identified by this method. For the determination of vertical fractures, diagonal boreholes can be beneficial (it increases the likelihood to hit a fracture with the borehole).
Flow logging in a boreholes can help to identify high-flow zones within a borehole. Therefore, a propeller sonde is lowered in the borehole and the propeller movements while pumping the borehole are recorded. High-flow zones will lead to a change of the propeller rotation speed.
Contaminant data
Different sampling and monitoring techniques for contaminants have been developed. The following list gives an overview of some common ones:
- Snap samplers
- Diffusion cells
- Bladder pump
- NAPL-FLUTe
- FACT-FLUTe
- Passive flux meters
- etc.
Integral pump tests can be used to quantify the contaminant mass discharge.
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