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Published byTamsin Tiffany Tyler Modified over 9 years ago
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SI and English Units SI: - Mass = kilogram - Length = meter
- time = second English - Mass = slug - Length = foot
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Transmissivity The amount of water that can be transmitted horizontally through a unit width by the full saturated thickness of the aquifer under a hydraulic gradient of 1. T = bK T = transmissivity. b = saturated thickness. K = hydraulic conductivity. Multilayer => T1 + T2 + … + Tn
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Specific Storage Specific storage Ss = amount of water per unit volume stored or expelled owing to compressibility of mineral skeleton and pore water per unit change in head (1/L). Ss = ρwg(α+nβ) α = compressibiliy of aquifer skeleton. n = porosity. β = compressibility of water.
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Storativity of confined Unit
S = b Ss Ss = specific storage. b = aquifer thickness. All water released in confined, saturated aquifer comes from compressibility of mineral skeleton and pore water.
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Storativity in Unconfined Unit
Changes in saturation associated with changes in storage. Storage or release depends on specific yield Sy and specific storage Ss. S = Sy + b Ss
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Volume of water drained from aquifer
Vw = SAdh Vw = volume of water drained. S = storativity (dimensionless). A = area overlying drained aquifer. dh = average decline in head.
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Average horizontal conductivity:
Kh avg = m=1,n (Khmbm/b) Kv avg Kh avg Average vertical conductivity: Kv avg = b / m=1,n (bm /Kvm)
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Grad h = [(dh/dx)2 + (dh/dy)2]0.5
θ = arctan ((dh/dy)/(dh/dx)) dh/dy θ O dh/dx X
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Forces Gravity – pulls water downward. External pressure
- Vadose zone: atmospheric pressure - Saturation zone: atmospheric + water Molecular attraction.
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Resisting Forces Shear stresses - shear resistance – viscosity.
Normal stresses. Friction = Shear stresses + Normal stresses.
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Mechanical Energy Kinetic energy:
Ek = ½ m v2 [ML2/T2; slug-ft2/s2 or kg-m2/s2] m = mass [M; slug or kg] v = velocity [L/T; ft/s or m/s]
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Mechanical Energy Gravitational potential energy:
W = Eg = mgz. [ML2/T2; slug-ft2/s2 or kg-m2/s2]. z = elevation [L; ft or m]. g = gravitational acceleration [L/T2; ft/s2 or m/s2].
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Pressure Pressure P = F/A.
P = pressure [M/LT2; slug/ft/s2 or (kg-m/s2)/m2]. A is cross-sectional area perpendicular to the direction of the force (L2; ft2 or m2). F is force (ML/T2; slug-ft/s2 or kg-m/s2). P unit is Pascal (N/m2). P => potential energy per unit volume.
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Energy per unit mass Etm = v2/2 + gz + P/ρ. [(L/T)2]
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Hydraulic head, h Hydraulic head is energy per unit weight.
h = v2/2g + z + P/gρ. [L]. Unit: (L; ft or m). v ~ 10-6 m/s or 30 m/y for ground water flows. v2/2g ~ m2/s2 / (2 x 9.8 m/s2) ~ m. h = z + P/gρ. [L].
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Hydraulic head, h h = z + P/gρ = z + hp. z = elevation.
hp = P/gρ - pressure head – height of water column.
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Head in water with variable density
P2 = ρfghf P1 = ρpghp P2 = P1 ρfghf = ρpghp hf = (ρp/ρf )hp
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Force potential and hydraulic head
Ф = gz + P/ρ = gz + ρ ghp/ ρ = g(z+hp) h = z + hp Ф = gh. g can be considered a constant ~ head can be used to represent the force potential. Head controls the movement of ground water.
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Darcy’s Law Q = -KA(dh/dl). dh/dl = Hydraulic gradient.
dh = change in head between two points separated by small distance dl.
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Reynolds number R = ρqd/μ. R - the Reynolds number (dimensionless).
ρ – fluid density (M/L3; kg/m3). μ – fluid viscosity (M/T-L; kg/s-m). q – discharge velocity (L/T; m/s). d – diameter of the passageway through which the fluid moves (L; m).
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Laminar flow (Small R < 10) Flow lines
Darcy’s Law: Yes Laminar flow (Small R < 10) Flow lines Darcy’s Law: No Flow lines Turbulent flow (Large R)
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Specific discharge Q = vA v = Q/A = -K dh/dl
Specific discharge is also called Darcy flux.
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Seepage (average linear) velocity
vx = Q/(neA) = -K/ne dh/dl vx = average linear velocity (L/T; ft/s; m/s). ne = the effective porosity (dimensionless)
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Dupuit assumptions Hydraulic gradient is equal to the slope of the water table. For small water-table gradients, the streamlines are horizontal and equipotential lines are vertical.
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Flow lines and flow nets
A flow line is an imaginary line that traces the path that a particle of ground water would flow as it flows through an aquifer. A flow net is a network of equipotential lines and associated flow lines.
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Boundary conditions No-flow boundary –
flow line – parallel to the boundary. Equipotential line - intersect at right angle. Constant-head boundary – flow line – intersect at right angle. Equipotential line - parallel to the boundary. Water-table boundary – flow line – depends. Equipotential line - depends.
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Constant head h = 40 feet
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Estimate the quantity of water from flow net
q’ = Kph/f. q’ – total volume discharge per unit width of aquifer (L3/T; ft3/d or m3/d). K – hydraulic conductivity (L/T; ft/d or m/d). p – number of flowtubes bounded by adjacent pairs of flow lines. h – total head loss over the length of flow lines (L; ft or m). f - number of squares bounded by any two adjacent flow lines and covering the entire length of flow.
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