Title: Introduction to Groundwater
1Designing of a groundwater pumping field (s) in
the vicinity of landfill sites By 1- Sulaiman
AL-Mulaifi 980711413 2- Ahmed
AL-Harrasi 199905029 3- Mohammed
AL-Awadi 199905040 4- Ahmed AL-Waeel
200001489 Advisor Prof. Mohsen Sherif
2Importance of Groundwater Resources in UAE
- One of the critical problems that hinder the
development in UAE is the lack of renewable water
resources. - Rainfall events are random and infrequent in UAE,
average annual rainfall is around 110 mm/year. - The groundwater resources constitute about 70 of
the total water production in the country, and
mainly used for agriculture development. - Alternatives
- Conservation in water use.
- water pricing.
- Reuse of treated wastewater.
- Minimizing losses.
- Surface water harvesting
- Improving the potentiality of aquifers.
- Protection of the available groundwater resources
from any possible contamination hazards.
3Project Summary
Phase One
- Groundwater flow and transport of pollutants in
groundwater systems will be studied and simulated
numerically. - A comprehensive review and understanding of the
theoretical background including -
- Hydrogeological parameters and coefficients
-
- Governing equations of groundwater flow and
pollutant transport in porous media -
- Initial and boundary conditions.
-
- Concepts of numerical models.
-
- The USGS groundwater and solute transport model,
SUTRA will be studied - and applied.
4Project Summary
- Phase two
- Different hydrogeological settings and boundary
conditions will be considered. - Groundwater pollution from landfill sites will be
simulated in the vertical and horizontal domains. - Groundwater pumping field(s) will be located in
the vicinity of a landfill site and the pollution
will be simulated under different pumping rates. - The maximum pumping rate that would not allow any
pollutants to migrate into the protection zone of
the pumping field(s) will be identified.
5Objectives of the Project
- Study the groundwater flow and transport of
contaminants in groundwater systems - Employ a numerical model to analyze the
groundwater flow and solute transport under
different hydrogeological settings. - Present the equi-potential, equi-concentration
lines and velocity vectors - Design of the well field(s), near a landfill
including rates and locations of pumping.
6HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
- Never-ending circulation.
- Constant movement.
- Sun heating is the key factor.
7Aquifers System
- Groundwater, Unsaturated zone, Saturated zone.
- 1- Unconfined Aquifers
- The water table is subjected to atmospheric
pressure - Is directly recharged by rainfall
- Also called water table aquifer
- 2- Confined Aquifers
- Bounded by impermeable layers (from top and
bottom) - Pressure is not atmospheric
- 3- Artesian Aquifers
- Are confined aquifers but under high pressure.
- Water will rise above the ground surface without
pumping - 4- Leaky Aquifers
- One of the upper or lower confining layers is
semi-permeable - 5- Perched Aquifers
8Porosity
- The porosity or pore space is the amount of air
space or void space between soil particles. -
-
-
9Specific Yield
- Specific yield is the ratio of volume of water
- that drains from a saturated rock due to
- gravity to the total volume of rock.
- A sample with smaller grain sizes will have a
- lower specific yield because of the Surface
Tension. - The specific storage of an aquifer can be defined
as the volume of water that a unit volume of the
aquifer under a unit decline in the average head
releases from storage due to - expansion of water and compression of the
aquifer.
Specific Storage (Ss)
10Storage coefficient (Sc)
- It's the volume of water that a permeable unit
will absorb or loss from storage per unit surface
area per unit change in head. - Sc B Ss (Confined aquifer)
- Sc Sy h Ss (Unconfined aquifer)
11Hydraulic conductivity (K)
- Its a function of properties of both porous
media and the water passing through it which
represent the specific rate (L / T ) of water
passing through the porous media. - K k (? g/µ)
- k (permeability) a function of porous media
only which present the actual - permeability of that media, ? density of
fluid, g the acceleration of gravity - and µ dynamic viscosity of fluid
Transmissivity
Its amount of water that can be transmitted
horizontally through a unit width by the full
saturated thickness. T K B
12 Transport Processes in Groundwater
- Advection, Mechanical Dispersion, and Diffusion
- Advection depends on the velocity of the water in
the porous media and its always in the flow
direction. -
132. Mechanical Dispersion
- The Mechanical Dispersion depends on the shape of
the soil particles and the distance between them.
143. Diffusion
- Diffusion is a chemical process. It depends on
the pollutant it self and the characteristic of
groundwater. - It does not depend on the velocity of the fluid.
- Any pollutant tends to move from areas of high
concentrations to areas of lower concentrations.
15Governing Equations
1- Darcy Equation
Can also be written as
16- 2- Fluid Continuity Equation
- For Steady State
3- Hydrodynamic Dispersion Equation
17Initial conditions
- Assumed values for the unknowns (H, C).
- Initiate the simulation.
- No effect in the final solution.
- Could be based on field observations.
18Boundary Conditions
- Three types of conditions
- 1st type Specific head.
- 2nd type Specific flux.
- 3rd type Mixed boundary.
Ground surface
Water table
Hinge point
Piezometric head
Mixed water
Seaside
Aquitard
Land Side
Floating point
Aquifer
Freshwater
Seawater
qn 0
Bottom boundary Impermeable
19Modeling steps
-
- 1- Calibration
- The simulated values are compared with field
measurements. -
- - Input data are altered within range until
simulated and observed values - are fitted within a chosen tolerance.
-
- - Proper calibration will allow for good
validation . -
- - Model calibration is time consuming as it
requires a number of simulation runs.
20- Calibration for an observation wells.
- For about five years.
- Difference between the observed and calculated
heads should be within certain accuracy
21- 2- Validation
- The comparison of the model with a new
(independent) data set not used in model
calibration. -
- - One time fit of calculated and measured values
does not guarantee accuracy. -
- - Should be conducted for a number of
observation wells. -
22- Validation for observation wells.
- For about eleven years.
- Difference between the observed and calculated
heads should be within certain accuracy.
23A comparison between the observed and calculated
water levels at a specified time.
24- 3-Predection
- The outcome of a numerical model must be reviewed
critically. - After calibration and validation, the model can
be used for assessment of future scenarios. - Extrapolation the future scenarios is more
accurate if it is based on a long-term series of
observed events in the past.
25Sutra Model
- Applicable to
- Saturated and (or) unsaturated flow in porous
medium. - Constant or variable-density fluid flow.
- Solute or energy transport (2D,3D finite element
codes) - GUI is a preprocessor and postprocessor
graphical-user interfaces for preparing SUTRA
input data and viewing model output for use
within Argus Open Numerical Environments (Argus
ONE).
26Argus ONE Description
- Imports data from different sources.
- Graphically defines the problem domain, boundary
conditions and other excitations to the
groundwater system like pumping or recharge. - Automatically creates finite-element meshes and
finite-difference grids.
27Argus ONE Description
- Interpret the data to the developed meshes and
grids - Mathematically manipulate the data
- Organize information using GIS and other
databases - Visualize your model's input and results
28Study Domain and Parameters (Basic Run)
29Discritization of Domain and Layers
30Resulted Equipotential lines and Velocity Vectors
31Resulted Equi-concentration Lines
32Run 2 Reducing the pumping rate
33Resulted Equipotential lines and Velocity Vectors
34Resulted Equi-concentration Lines
35Run 3 Specified Flux Boundary
36Resulted Equipotential lines and Velocity Vectors
37Resulted Equi-concentration Lines
38Run 4 non-isotrpic system
39Resulted Equipotential lines and Velocity Vectors
40Resulted Equi-concentration Lines
41Conclusion
- Groundwater resources constitute an important
element in the water budget and cornerstone for
the agriculture in the UAE - Groundwater resources might be polluted
contaminated from different sources including,
among other, landfill sites - Many factors affect the transport of pollutants
in groundwater systems - -Hydrogeological parameters.
- -Isotropy and homogeneity.
- -Pumping and recharge.
- -Location of the pollution source.
- -Boundary conditions.
42- Conclusion
- Groundwater models should be calibrated using
real data sets and verified against another
independent data sets in order to ensure that
they are representative of the hydrogeological
system under consideration. - SUTRA has been used to simulate the groundwater
flow and pollutant transport under different
conditions.
43Future work
- Based on the availability of data, a landfill
site will be selected. The possible contamination
from the selected landfill will be simulated
using SUTRA-Argus model under the unsteady state
conditions. - The optimum location of the well field and
pumping rates will be identify.
44