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Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst aquifer studies Fred Paillet Geosciences Department University of Arkansas

Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst aquifer studies

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Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst aquifer studies. Fred Paillet Geosciences Department University of Arkansas. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst aquifer studies

Fred PailletGeosciences Department

University of Arkansas

Page 2: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

FLOW LOGGING

Flowmeter underpump indicatesflow zones and relative contribution

But estimates oftransmissivity arehighly local and notrepresentative of the flow path

Page 3: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

AltonabedrockboreholesExample whereclosely spaced boreholes yieldcompletely different estimatesof T for thesame solutionedbedding planes

Page 4: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Using flow log data to measure hydraulic head

• Formulate a two variable inversion• Obtain two flow profiles under different

conditions• Usually ambient and pumping• Measure difference in open-hole water level• Model flow using specified T and h values • Vary T and h until match BOTH profiles

simultaneously

Page 5: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

TWO STEADY FLOW PROFILES USUALLY AMBIENT AND STRESSED

Productive karst – Low Q drawdown same size as head differences so that drawdown is the same order of magnitude as the naturally

occurring hydraulic head differences, biasing T measurements.

Page 6: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Example where ambient head differences have a major influence on the detection and characterization of flow zones in a karst aquifer. Presence of

major flow zones masked by hydraulic head differences.

Page 7: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Ambient flow – no flow tolowest zone

Pumping flow – no drawdownon middle zone

Page 8: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Nuts and boltsofFlow log interpretation

Page 9: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

SUBTRACTION OF INFLOWS METHOD Remove head influence by elimination of variable but also throw out any attempt to infer hydraulic head

for each flow zoneRef: Molz et al, 1988, WRR

Depth Amb Ambinflow

Pump Pumpinflow

Diff ofDiffs

% ofTotal T

Above Below Diff Above Below Diff Δdiff Δ as %pump

m l/min l/min l/min l/min l/min l/min l/min %

16.8 0.00 -1.20 1.20 10.00 6.00 4.00 2.80 28

32.0 -1.20 -0.05 -1.15 6.00 1.50 4.50 5.65 57

39.8 -0.05 0.00 -0.05 1.50 0.00 1.50 1.55 15

Verify 0.00 10.00 10.00 100

Page 10: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Paillet (WRR, 1998)model

An alternate approach is to usea flow model to simultaneously fit models to ambient and pumped flow profiles giving directmeasurements of T and h

Page 11: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

BOREHOLE FLOW MODELING Yields direct estimates for both T and h

MODEL BOTH HEAD AND TRANSMISSIVITY FLOW ZONE TRANSMISSIVITY ZONE HYDRAULIC HEAD

16.8 m 2.0 × 10-5 m2/s 5.95 m below TC32.0 4.0 × 10-5 6.8739.8 1.3 × 10-5 6.87

Page 12: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Flow logs in off-line drainage wellsSolution horizons in gypsum rubble

aquifer

Page 13: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

VERIFICATION OF FLOW MODEL ESTIMATES OF WL

Piezometers available in the vicinity of two of the logged drainage wells

PIEZ DEPTH m MODEL DEPTH m WL PIEZ m BGL WL MODEL m BGL

WELL 2A

OPEN HOLE OPEN HOLE 4.72 4.72

12.0-15.0 18.0-20.0 4.32 4.54

30.0-32.0 36.0-38.0 4.87 4.91

43.0-46.0 43.0-46.0 4.82 4.91

WELL 5

OPEN HOLE OPEN HOLE 2.83 2.83

4.2-6.2 8.0-12 2.81 2.71

12.3-15.2 20.0-22.0 2.81 2.84

21.2-24.2 28.0-30.0 3.39 3.45

Page 14: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Trolling EM FlowmeterHead values indicate an aquitard near 40 m in depth and little vertical head

gradient above 40 m

Page 15: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Wirelinepackersystem

Suitable for use asa standard probe run with other probes during normal wellloggingoperations

Page 16: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Single packer setting – Convert to readings between stationsSite directly above pumped aquifer and had assumed a strong vertical gradient in efforts to monitor heavy metal contamination. Packer data shows lateral drainage by karst bed and negligible downward gradient below 200 feet.

Page 17: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

FLOWMETER CROSS-BOREHOLE TESTSMonitor the propagation of drawdown outward along flow paths by measuring the evolving flow

regime in an adjacent borehole

Page 18: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Single fracture experiment toverify model predictions where there is a known analytic solution

Page 19: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Ambler PA cross-hole test

• Solution on bedding plane connects boreholes• Boreholes 30 m apart• Pumped well – T = 350 m2/day• Observation well – T = 250 m2/day• Pump rate = 23 liters/min• Model response with T = 300 m2/day• Storage coefficient (S) the only variable• Test duration – 1 minute pulse

Page 20: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

T = 300 m2/dayS CONTROLS AMPLITUDE

-0.3

-0.25

-0.2

-0.15

-0.1

-0.05

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0 60 120Obs flow

S = 5exp-5

S = 3exp-5

S = 1exp-4

Page 21: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

A more ambitious use of the cross-hole model

Leakage between fractures• Two-bedding planes• Pumped well has upper plane cased off• Pump only from lower zone• Measure flow between zones in obsv well• Expect pull down flow from upper to lower

Page 22: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

LEAKAGE BETWEEN ZONES

Page 23: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Effect of Leakage on DownflowHead decay time = 1/L in minutes

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20-0.3

-0.2

-0.1

0

0.1

L = 2.50

L = 0.50

L = 0.25

L = 0.10

L = 0.05

L = 0.00

Time in minutes

Flo

w in

ga

llon

s p

er

min

Page 24: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

LEAKY AQUITARD TEST

• Two high T karst aquifers• Upper intersects canal• Pump from well completed in lower• Measure borehole flow between aquifers• Is aquitard between them leaky?• If no leakage – pumping induces down flow that

steadily increases• If very high leakage flow shows short downward

pulse that relaxes over time

Page 25: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Flow schematic

Page 26: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

S FLORIDA KARST T1= T2 = 50,000 ft2/day

-150.000

-100.000

-50.000

0.000

50.000

0.00 5.00 10.00 15.00 20.00

Time in minutes

Flo

w i

n l

iter

s/m

in

Page 27: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Head decay time = 1/0.05 = 20 minutes

Page 28: Hydraulic head applications of flowmeter logs in karst  aquifer studies

Conclusions• T derived from flow logs is highly local• h derived from logs or packers denotes large-scale flow

path• Two-variable interpretation can be applied to suitable pairs

of flow logs to give T and h• Derive estimates of head on flow paths in open boreholes• Results obtained as part of the routine logging process• Values not as accurate as obtained with packers – but with

much less expense and effort• Used as stand-alone data or to prepare for more effective

straddle packer program