Title: IRP IGM
1IRP - IGM
Ground-gas monitoring the way forward
Dr Mark Todman Urban Vision Partnership Ltd
2Improved risk prediction from continuous
in-borehole ground-gas monitoring (IRP-IGM)-
project partners
- Salamander
- Project management
- Responsible for hardware design, development and
production - University of Manchester
- Project coordination
- Basic and applied science development
- Urban Vision Partnership Ltd
- Stakeholder engagement
- Methodology guidance preparation and adoption
3Objectives and methods of gas monitoring
- Determine the risk
- Predict how this may change in the future
- This is currently achieved by
- i) Periodic static measurement of gas
concentrations - ii) Using boreholes to access the subsurface
-
4The evolution of UK risk assessment
- Recent UK guidance moves towards monitoring
periods based on risk and proposed end use - Risk assessment is only as good as the input
data - Over conservative remediation due to unknown or
poorly quantified worst case conditions -
5Problems with existing UK best practice
- What is the sampling frequency?
- Sampling frequency currently based on what is
possible rather than variability of gas in the
sub surface - Each borehole is unique
- Variable geology, installation and sampling
regime - Is concentration related to risk?
- Risk may be greater when gas generation is
rapid or when gas flux is high, which might not
be related to gas concentration -
6Current UK best practice spot sampling data
7Cost? Benefit?
- 8 years of monthly monitoring
- ..over 300 monitoring visits
- anything upwards of 30,000 gas monitoring
programme - to tell you
- not a lot!
8Adding a new dimension to monitoring
Meeting these requirements
- Determination of sampling frequency
- Characterisation of each borehole
- Definition of the relationship of concentration
to gas production / movement - will improve site characterisation and
understanding of the processes of ground gas
generation and movement.
9Adding a new dimension to monitoring
- Understanding of processes will improve the
ability to PREDICT ground gas concentration and
reduce uncertainty in Risk Assessment. - To understand processes temporal resolution of
sampling must be increased
10No significant change in monitoring technique?
Technology not available
Poorly understood processes
Technology too expensive
No supporting guidance
11What has changed?
- Recognition of the need for more representative
data - Availability of affordable technology
-
12www.gasclam.co.uk
- Key features
- Continuous monitoring of CH4, CO2, O2, H2S,
barometric borehole pressure and water level - ATEX approved
- Extended deployment, up to 6 months based on
hourly sampling - Robust stainless steel design
- Fits in 50mm borehole
- Easy to use and deploy
- Venting and vented modes
13Ability to collect ground-gas data
- Develop an understanding of the processes
controlling ground-gas migration, leading to
better prediction - Requires research and field trails
- Marketing effort for a new product and
methodology - Requires methodology development and stakeholder
engagement to develop best practice guidance -
14Continuous Data
995mb
15Time series data allows temporal variation to be
quantified or accounted for
Borehole with gas only observed at Christmas. A
period of continuous monitoring show otherwise
16Sampling rate and concentration variability can
be matched gas concentration can vary on a range
of timescales.
Short time scale variability
17Risk Assessment rather than Risk Recognition
- Time series data allows a meaningful summary of
concentration measurements - The only meaningful summary at present is whether
a borehole ever exceeds a threshold concentration
concentration duration curves
18Concentration duration
Black curves spot sampling simulation
19Correlations
20Correlations
Correlation of atmospheric pressure and
concentration
21Correlations
22Correlations
- Such relationships could give confidence in
- the prediction of concentration from other
environmental parameters - recognising the driving force behind gas movement
- however
23Correlations
- INVERSE RELATIONSHIP?
- Without time dimension this could be written
off as error / scatter / poor understanding of
processes / increased uncertainty
24Large scatter on data where has my
predictability gone?
25Hysteresis
A closer look reveals loops of data
Time
26Hysteresis
27Hysteresis
28Hysteresis
- Borehole pressure (RP) is the same in both
boreholes despite different gas compositions -
suggests borehole pressure is wholly a
consequence of atmospheric pressure not gas
production. - RP is negatively correlated with AP, however,
hystereses are apparent. - Hystereses are anti-clockwise, c.f. clockwise
hystereses in solute/discharge rating
relationships. - Anti-clockwise hystereses - at identical AP,
higher RP whilst AP is falling rather than rising.
29Calibrating a borehole
- Ground gas concentration is not measured directly
because the borehole is an uncalibrated sampling
device - Hydrogeologists rely on pump tests to
characterise production rates of water from
boreholes - With time-series gas concentration data a similar
approach can be adopted
30Borehole characterisation
31Borehole characterisation
- To set the context for any subsequent monitoring
programme every borehole should be characterised
to allow more reasonable inter-comparison - A borehole is not an innocent bystander
32Summary
- Time-series data allows
- A more direct measurement of ground-gas regime
- Characterisation of boreholes
- Improvement of understanding of processes
- Quantification of the real ground-gas flux
33Developing new a methodology, guidance and best
practice
- Urban Vision experience as a regulator and as a
consultant - Best practice to be driven from the bottom up
34Developing stakeholder engagement
- Continuing to develop network of contacts across
the public and private sector - Expert Advisory Group
- Dissemination of application data and methodology
development through a Gasclam User Group on
www.gasclam.co.uk
35Contact details
- Urban Vision Dr Mark Todman
- E mark.todman_at_urbanvision.org.uk
- T 07912 774 934
- University of Manchester Dr Peter Morris
- Project Coordinator
- E peter.morris_at_manchester.ac.uk
- T 0161 275 0183
- Salamander Dr Stephen Boult
- E s.boult_at_salamander-group.co.uk
- T 0845 053 1234