Principles of Groundwater Flow

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 15B - Fluids in Motion
Advertisements

Groundwater Hydraulics Daene C. McKinney
Groundwater Hydraulics Daene C. McKinney
Groundwater Flow Equations
Yhd Soil and Groundwater Hydrology
PRINCIPLES OF GROUNDWATER FLOW
The Bernoulli Equation - Work and Energy
TOPIC 2 STEADY STATE FLOW THROUGH SOIL Course: S0705 – Soil Mechanic Year: 2008.
Tripp Winters.  Anisotropy is a common feature in water laid sedimentary deposits (fluvial, clastic lake, deltaic and glacial outwash).  Water lain.
Water Movement in Soil and Rocks. Two Principles to Remember:
Ground-Water Flow and Solute Transport for the PHAST Simulator Ken Kipp and David Parkhurst.
Review Of Basic Hydrogeology Principles. Types of Terrestrial Water Groundwater SoilMoisture Surface Water.
Review Session 1. Measuring Evapotranspiration Lysimeter – a large container holding soil and plants. Mass Balance: Debate: Pros/Cons.
Watershed Hydrology, a Hawaiian Prospective; Groundwater Ali Fares, PhD Evaluation of Natural Resource Management, NREM 600 UHM-CTAHR-NREM.
Week 2 Terminology + Hydraulics review. Terms Porosity Porosity Moisture content Moisture content Saturation Saturation Aquifer Aquifer Aquitard Aquitard.
Figure from Hornberger et al. (1998) Darcy’s data for two different sands.
Universal college engineering & technology
ESS 454 Hydrogeology Module 3 Principles of Groundwater Flow Point water Head, Validity of Darcy’s Law Diffusion Equation Flow in Unconfined Aquifers &
ESS 454 Hydrogeology Module 2 Properties of Materials Basic Physics Darcy’s Law Characteristics of Aquifers Elasticity and Storage Instructor: Michael.
8. Permeability (Das, chapter 7)
Groundwater Hydrology Rachel Clark, P.E. Environmental Compliance Coordinator KPB Risk Management.
ESS 454 Hydrogeology Module 3 Principles of Groundwater Flow Point water Head, Validity of Darcy’s Law Diffusion Equation Flow in Unconfined Aquifers &
Chapter 7 continued Open Channel Flow
Прикладная Гидрогеология Tomsk Polytechnic University Tomsk, Russian Federation Spring Semester 2014 Yoram Eckstein, Ph.D. Fulbright Professor 2013/2014.
1 GROUNDWATER HYDROLOGY AND CONTAMINANT TRANSPORT CEVE 518 P.C. de Blanc C.J. Newell 1.Porosity and Density Continued 2.Saturation and Water Content 3.Darcy.
What process is simulated by these moving dots ? a)- Diffusion b)- Dispersion c)- Advection d)- Free convection e)- Something else f)- This is NO groundwater.
Cross Section of Unconfined and Confined Aquifers
Groundwater Pollution Remediation NOTE 3 2D Analytical Solutions.
Groundwater 1 Groundwater flows slowly through the voids between grains or the cracks in solid rock. Much of our knowledge depends on field and laboratory.
Basic dynamics  The equations of motion and continuity Scaling Hydrostatic relation Boussinesq approximation  Geostrophic balance in ocean’s interior.
CHE315 Pressure Drop and Friction Loss 2.10 Design Equations for Laminar and Turbulent Flow in Pipes.
Unit: IV-Fluid Dynamic
Multi-Layered Aquifer Systems Chapter Nine Analysis and Evaluation of Pumping Test Data Revised Second Edition.
Lesson 22 BERNOULLI’S EQUATION
Darcy’s Law and Flow CIVE Darcy allows an estimate of: the velocity or flow rate moving within the aquifer the average time of travel from the head.
Aquifer Storage Properties CVEG 5243 Ground Water Hydrology T. Soerens.
Groundwater Jeopardy What is primary porosity? Porosity between grains
CHAPTER SEVEN INTRODUCTORY WELL HYDROLOGY. GROUNDWATER OCCURRENCE.
ATM 301 Lecture #7 (sections ) Soil Water Movements – Darcy’s Law and Richards Equation.
Lecture 20 Ground Water (3) Ground water movement
Principles of Groundwater Flow
FREE CONVECTION 7.1 Introduction Solar collectors Pipes Ducts Electronic packages Walls and windows 7.2 Features and Parameters of Free Convection (1)
Geopotential and isobaric surfaces
How does groundwater flow ? February 26, TOC  Definitions  Groundwater flow overview Equipotentials and flowlines  Wells  Laplace  Boundary.
CE 3354 Engineering Hydrology
Friction Losses Flow through Conduits Incompressible Flow.
 p and  surfaces are parallel =>  =  (p) Given a barotropic and hydrostatic conditions, is geostrophic current. For a barotropic flow, we have and.
Groundwater Flow Equations Groundwater Hydraulics Daene C. McKinney.
Groundwater Systems D Nagesh Kumar, IISc Water Resources Planning and Management: M8L3 Water Resources System Modeling.
Flow to Wells - 1 Groundwater Hydraulics Daene C. McKinney.
Groundwater movement Objective To be able to calculate the hydraulic conductivity of a sample given measurements from a permeameter To be able to evaluate.
Test Rules Answer all questions. Please answer on separate sheets of paper. Reference material. You may refer to one 8.5 x 11 inch page of notes, hand.
Groundwater movement Objective
Groundwater Review Aquifers and Groundwater Porosity
Flocculator Extras.
Groundwater Learning objectives
Flow in Aquifers – 1 Confined Aquifer Flow
Darcy’s Law and Richards Equation
Principles of Groundwater Flow
ABE 223 ABE Principles – Machine systems Bernoulli’s Law Tony Grift
Finite Difference Method
Philip B. Bedient Civil and Environmental Engineering Rice University
Groundwater withdrawal and recharge (steady state situation)
Groundwater vocabulary
Groundwater hydraulics – lecture 8
Chapter 5: Unconfined aquifers
Anisotropy – Key ideas Effective conductivity that represents aggregate effect of flow through a layered system Effective conductivity is different parallel.
Some Quiz Questions Unit: Subsurface Flow.
Chapter 2 Equations & Numerical Methods
Philip B. Bedient Civil and Environmental Engineering Rice University
Presentation transcript:

Principles of Groundwater Flow

Hydraulic Head Bernoulli’s Equation Hydrostatic Pressure

Hydraulic Head Bernoulli’s Equation Hydrostatic Pressure

Hydraulic Head Total Hydraulic Head (drop velocity – why?) Or Force Potential (driver) Bernoulli’s equation suggests this should be constant, but clearly it is not – what’s going on?

How to measure it? Piezometer

Validity and Applicability of Darcy’s Law Reynolds Number Re = (rvd/m) r – density v – velocity d – characteristic distance m- viscosity

Equations of Flow – Confined Aquifers Combine Darcy’s Law and Conservation of Mass (Derivation on Pages 126-128 of Fetter) Governing Equation Transmissivity (average over z direction)

Unconfined Aquifers Without a confining upper layer the governing equation changes a little Boussinesq Equation What makes this equation so difficult to deal with?

Direction of Groundwater Flow Potential and Equipotential Lines What direction is the flow in

Steady Flow in Confined Aquifer

Steady Flow in Confined Aquifer

Steady Flow in an Unconfined A quifer

Steady Flow in an Unconfined A quifer

Groundwater Divides Can our equations predict these? Source or sink

Groundwater Divides Can our equations predict these?

Groundwater Divides If h=h1 at x=0 and h =h2 at x=L

Groundwater Divides Discharge per unit width

Groundwater Divides Location of GW Divide is where q’=0

What about 2-d steady state Confined Unconfined

What about 2-d steady state Confined Unconfined

Sample Problem Wells are located at locations (x,y)=(0,0), (15,20) and (10,10) and the respective head at each well is 15,140 and 8 5. All units are in meters. Calculate the head distribution assuming a confined aquifer. Calculate the head distribution assuming an unconfined aquifer. You obtain a fourth measurement at (x,y)=(5,5) where the head is approximately 27. Is the aquifer confined or unconfined?

Final Test You are performing a study of fluid flow through the groundwater system underlying a very large lake. As shown on the next page, you have been provided with five wells which penetrate into the underlying geology. You have determined previously that the flow through this system occurs as follows: Water moves from west to east in the lower confined aquifer with essentially no flow between the lower aquifer and the middle aquifer. Flow in the middle aquifer has components both in the northeast direction AND vertically into the upper confining layer (upper aquitard). Flow in the upper aquifer is vertically upward from the upper aquitard and into the lake with no noticeable horizontal components to flow. The rate of flow into the lake is 0.05 meters per day. The hydraulic conductivity of the upper aquifer is 0.01 cm/sec. The conductivity of both confining layers is 3 x 10-5 cm/s. The conductivity of the middle aquifer is 0.06 cm/s. The conductivity of the lower confined aquifer is unknown.

Final Test If you were to compare the water levels in wells A and B, which well would have the higher water level? How would you calculate the water level difference between A and B? Which well has the higher water level, well A or Well Q?

Direction of Groundwater Flow What if anisotropic?? Kx is not the same as Ky (Kz) Transform in to equivalent isotropic case

Direction of Groundwater Flow What if anisotropic?? Procedure