Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLynne Lawson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Groundwater pumping to remediate groundwater pollution March 5, 2002
2
TOC 1) Squares 2) FieldTrip: McClellan 3) Finite Element Modeling
3
First: Squares Oxford Dictionary says “a geometric figure with four equal sites and four right angles”
4
Squares Units within a flow net are curvilinear figures… In certain cases, squares will be formed Constant head boundary…
5
Flownet
6
No flow crosses the boundary of a flowline ! If interval between equipotential lines and interval between flowlines is constant, then volume of water within each curvilinear unit is the same…
7
Flow nets (rules) Flowlines are perpendicular to equipotential lines One way to assume that Q’s are equal is to construct the flownet with curvilinear squares Streamlines are perpendicular to constant head boundaries Equipotential lines are perpendicular to no-flow boundaries
8
Flow nets (rules 2) In heterogeneous soil, the tangent law is satisfied at the boundary If flow net is drawn such that squares exist in one part of the formation, squares also exist in areas with the same K K1 K2 11 22
9
Second: McClellan Airbase
11
Piping system
12
Groundwater extraction wells
13
Waste water treatment plant
14
How to determine the spacing of wells? Determine feasible flow rates Determine range of influence Determine required decrease of water table Calculate well spacings
15
Confined Aquifer Well discharge under steady state can be determined using
16
Unconfined Aquifer Well discharge under steady state can be determined using
17
Unconfined Aquifer Well discharge under steady state WITH surface recharge can be determined using
18
What is optimal well design ? In homogeneous soil:
19
In heterogeneous situation: Wells have flow rate between 1 and 100 gpm Some wells are in clay, others in sand
21
Finite Difference method Change the derivative into a finite difference
22
Approach to numerical solutions 1) Subdivide the flow region into finite blocks or subregions (discretization) such that different K values can be assigned to each block and the differentials can be converted to finite differences
23
Approach to numerical solutions 2) Write the flow equation in algebraic form (using finite difference or finite elements) for each node or block
24
Approach to numerical solutions 3) Use “numerical methods” to solve the resulting ‘n’ equations in ‘n’ unknowns for h subject to boundary and initial conditions
25
1-D example Boundaries: h left = 10, h right = 3 Initial conditions h = 0 K is homogeneous = 3 Delta x = 2
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.