Title of article :
Interpretation of injection–withdrawal tracer experiments conducted between two wells in a large single fracture
Author/Authors :
K. S. Novakowski، نويسنده , , G. Bickerton، نويسنده , , P. Lapcevic، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
21
From page :
227
To page :
247
Abstract :
Tracer experiments conducted using a flow field established by injecting water into one borehole and withdrawing water from another are often used to establish connections and investigate dispersion in fractured rock. As a result of uncertainty in the uniqueness of existing models used for interpretation, this method has not been widely used to investigate more general transport processes including matrix diffusion or advective solute exchange between mobile and immobile zones of fluid. To explore the utility of the injection–withdrawal method as a general investigative tool and with the intent to resolve the transport processes in a discrete fracture, two tracer experiments were conducted using the injection–withdrawal configuration. The experiments were conducted in a fracture which has a large aperture (>500 μm) and horizontally pervades a dolostone formation. One experiment was conducted in the direction of the hydraulic gradient and the other in the direction opposite to the natural gradient. Two tracers having significantly different values of the free-water diffusion coefficient were used. To interpret the experiments, a hybrid numerical–analytical model was developed which accounts for the arcuate shape of the flow field, advection–dispersion in the fracture, diffusion into the matrix adjacent to the fracture, and the presence of natural flow in the fracture. The model was verified by comparison to a fully analytical solution and to a well-known finite-element model. Interpretation of the tracer experiments showed that when only one tracer, advection–dispersion, and matrix diffusion are considered, non-unique results were obtained. However, by using multiple tracers and by accounting for the presence of natural flow in the fracture, unique interpretations were obtained in which a single value of matrix porosity was estimated from the results of both experiments. The estimate of porosity agrees well with independent measurements of porosity obtained from core samples. This suggests that: (i) the injection–withdrawal method is a viable tool for the investigation of general transport processes provided all relevant experimental conditions are considered and multiple conservative tracers are used; and (ii) for the conditions of the experiments conducted in this study, the dominant mechanism for exchange of solute between the fracture and surrounding medium is matrix diffusion.
Keywords :
Injection– withdrawal tracer experiment , Fractured rock , Numerical– analytical model , Matrixdiffusion
Journal title :
Journal of Contaminant Hydrology
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Journal of Contaminant Hydrology
Record number :
693567
Link To Document :
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