module 4 geology apj Abdul kalam university ktu part 2
godwinshaju06
32 views
65 slides
Aug 21, 2024
Slide 1 of 65
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
About This Presentation
module 4 geology apj Abdul kalam university ktu
Size: 2.77 MB
Language: en
Added: Aug 21, 2024
Slides: 65 pages
Slide Content
Groundwater
•Found in the subsurface, inside pores within soil
and rock
•Groundwater is the largest source of freshwater on
earth, and was little used until recently.
•It is usually much cleaner than surface water.
•The depth at which soil pore spaces or fractures and
voids in rock become completely saturated with
water is called the water table
Aquifers
•A geologic formation which contains water and
transmits it from one point to another in quantities
sufficient to permit economic development is called an
aquifer.
•Water-bearing geologic formation that can store and
yield usable amounts of water
•Aquifers are usually saturated sands, gravel, fractured
rock, or cavernous and vesicular rock.
•Aquifers may occur at various depths
Types of Aquifers
1-ConfinedAquifer
2-UnconfinedAquifer
Aquifers
Aquifers
Confined aquifer
•An aquifer which is sandwiched between two layers of
less permeable material is called confined aquifer.
•A confined aquifer is a water-bearing stratum that is
confined or overlain by a rock layer that does not
transmit water in any appreciable amount or that is
impermeable.
•These are separated from the ground surface by an
impermeable layer and are generally at greater depths
than unconfined aquifers. Also know as an artesian
aquifer.
•Unconfined aquifers are sometimes also called
water table or phreaticaquifers, because their
upper boundary is the water table
•When water can flow directly between the
surface and the saturated zone of an aquifer, the
aquifer is unconfined.
•The deeper parts of unconfined aquifers are
usually more saturated since gravity causes water
to flow downward.
AQUICLUDE
•It is a solid, impermeable area
underlying or overlying an
aquifer. If the impermeable
area overlies the aquifer
pressure could cause it to
become a confined aquifer.
•It can absorb water but
cannot transmit it in
significant amount. Eg:clay
and shale
AQUIFUGE:
•An impermeable body of
rock which contains no
interconnected openings
or interstices and
therefore neither
absorbs nor transmits
water. Example: compact
interlocking granite
AQUITARD:
•A bed of low
permeability and yield
water slowly in
comparison to t he
adjoining aquifer is
known as aquitard.
Sandy clay is an example
of aquitard.
PROPERTIES OF THE AQUIFER
i) Porosity
ii) Specific yield
iii) Specific retention
iv) Storage by efficiency ( field capacity)
v) Permeability
vi) Transmissibility
POROSITY:
•Porosity or void fraction is a measure of the void
(i.e., "empty") spaces in a material, and is a
fraction of the volume of voids over the total
volume, between 0–1, or as a percentage
between 0–100%.
•Porosity of surface soil typically decreases as
particle size increases.
Aquifer Porosity
PERMEABILITY
•Just as the porosity of a soil affects how much
water it can hold, it also affects how quickly
water can flow through the soil.
•The ability of water to flow through a soil is
referred to as the soil's permeability.
SPECIFIC YIELD
•The quantity of water which a unit volume of
aquifer, after being saturated, will yield by gravity;
it is expressed either as a ratio or as a percentage
of the volume of the aquifer; specific yield is a
measure of the water available to wells.
SPECIFIC RETENTION:
•The ratio of the volume of
water that a given body of
rock or soil will hold against
the pull of gravity to the
volume of the body itself. It
is usually expressed as a
percentage
FIELD CAPACITY:
•Field capacity is the amount
of soil moisture or water
content held in soil after
excess water has drained
away .
•The physical definition of field
capacity is the bulk water
content retained in soil
Transmissivity
•The capability of an entire aquifer to transmit the water.
•Transmissivity “T” has dimension s of m
2
/day
•Value of T range <12.4 to 12,400m2/day
T= kb
where,
k= hydraulic conductivity
b= thickness of the aquifer
Hydraulic conductivity
•The hydraulic conductivity K, may be defined as the flow
velocity per unit hydraulic gradient. expressed as
meters/day or meters /second.
•The quantitative measurement of flow or water is
generally expressed by the term hydraulic conductivity
rather than permeability.
Artesian aquifer
•An artesian aquifer is a
confinedaquifer containing groundwater under positive
pressure.
•A well drilled into such an aquifer is called an artesian well. If
water reaches the ground surface under the natural pressure of
the aquifer, the well is called a flowing artesian well
Process of Sea water Intrusion
Theboundarybetweenfreshgroundwaterandsaltwateris
referredtoasthefreshwater/saltwaterinterface.
Freshgroundwaterdischargingtothecoastpreventsthe
landwardencroachmentofsaltwater.
Iftoomuchfreshwaterispumpedfromtheaquifersystem,
thensaltwatercanmigratelandwardbyaprocessreferredto
as“saltwaterintrusion.”
Ifapumpingwellisclosetothelandwardmigrating
freshwater/saltwaterinterface,saltwatercouldenterthewell
andcontaminatethewatersupply,too..
•https://youtu.be/8zxZUSVjg10
Causes
Causes
Causes
Impacts
GhybenHerzberg Relation
GEOPHYSICAL METHODS
OF GROUND WATER
EXPLORATION
Module 3 Part 6
GEOPHYSICAL METHODS OF GROUND WATER
EXPLORATION
Geophysicsisanappliedbranch,
whichusesphysicalmethods
(suchasseismic,gravitational,
magnetic,electricaland
electromagneticmethods)at
thesurfaceofearthtomeasure
thephysicalpropertiesofthe
subsurface,along with
anomaliesinthoseproperties..
Simplestwayofground
waterexplorationisby
drillingseveralboreholes
andinstallingwells.Butthis
processisexpensive,labour
intensiveandtimeconsuming.
Electrical Resistivity Method
The electrical
resistivity method
involves the
measurement of the
apparent resistivity
of soils and rock as
a function of depth
or position.
It is based on the observation that water bearing formations are more
conductive and dry zones are resistive to the passage of electric
current.
The resistivity of natural materials to the flow of electric current varies
through a wide range.
Passing an electric current of a known quantity through the medium,
and measuring the potential difference between the two points would
determine apparent resistance of sub-surface formations.
By this procedure, it is possible to approximate the saturation or the
dryness of the medium through which the current is transmitting.
Electrical Resistivity Method
Methodology
The current is applied between with metal rods driven into the
ground, which act as current electrodes.
Distance between the electrodes varies from 10 meters to 100
meters, depending on the depth to be probed.
Dry soils around these electrodes are dampened with water to
ensure optimum electrical conductivity.
The resulting potential difference is measured with two more
electrodes called potential electrodes, located symmetrically in a
straight line between the two current electrodes.
The potential electrodes are placed some distance away from the
current electrodes to avoid rapid voltage fluctuation in the vicinity
WennerConfiguration
Procedure –inserting 2 electrodes into the ground
at a specific distance from each other. Direct current
or low frequency AC current is to be introduced
through these electrodes –Current Electrodes
As the current introduced travels from one electrode
, passes through the material and leaves ground at
other current electrode
Resistivity Logs
Obtained by using electrical methods for subsurface
explorations
Resistivity of rocks depend on their composition,
texture, electrolyte content etc
Variation in resistivity of rocks encountered in a
borehole is a useful indication of presence of an
aquifer up to the depth of the borehole
Hydrogeology, 431/531 - University of Arizona - Fall 2014 Dr. Marek Zreda
PART 18 Salt-water intrusion
In coastal areas salt water is in contact with fresh ground water. An interface between them can be
described using different fprmulations. Two of them are described below.
Ghyben-Herzberg relation
Consider a simple interface between salt water and fresh water (figure). The interface between the
two can be described using the Ghyben-Herzberg equation.
In equilibrium (no flow) the pressures at the interface are equal: p
s
= p
f
p
s
= z
s
γ
s
= z
s
ρ
s
g
p
f
= (z
s
+z
f
) γ
f
= (z
s
+z
f
) ρ
f
g
Equating them, we get:
z
s
ρ
s
g = (z
s
+z
f
) ρ
f
g
MSL
ocean
ocean
saline
water
fresh
water
air
z
f
z
s
land surfac
e
Read sections:
Salt-water intrusion 148
Hydrogeology, 431/531 - University of Arizona - Fall 2014 Dr. Marek Zreda
and solving for z
s
, we get:
Look at water densities:
sea water: ρ
s
= 1.025 g/cm
3
fresh water: ρ
f
= 1.000 g/cm
3
Put them in the Ghyben-Herzberg relation:
z
s
= 1/(1.025-1.000) z
f
= 40 z
f
Thus, there is 40 times more fresh water below the mean sea level than above it. In other words,
for every 1 m of water table elevation above sea level there is 40 m of fresh water below it.
This relation assumes a sharp boundary between salt and fresh water and no dispersion. It also
assumes that fresh water forms a wedge into sea water, and that fresh water discharges into the
ocean at a single point - an impossibility. Other relationships take these into account.
Glover relation
We now realize that fresh water discharges into the sea over an area rather than along a line (as
was the case in Ghyben-Herzberg) and that vertical component of flow is not negligible as water
moves along the interface (see figure).
z
s
ρ
f
ρ
s
ρ
f
–
---------------z
f
⋅= Ghyben-Herzberg relation
Hydrogeology, 431/531 - University of Arizona - Fall 2014 Dr. Marek Zreda
Salt-water intrusion 149
Glover developed the following equation for the shape of the freshwater-saltwater interface:
where:Q = flow in aquifer per unit length of shoreline;
K = hydraulic conductivity of aquifer;
x, z = coordinate distances from shoreline (figure).
Using the density of salt water of 1.025 g/cm
3
and that of freshwater of 1 g/cm
3
and substituting
z=0 into the Glover equation, we compute the width W of the zone through which fresh water
flows into the sea:
By substituting x=0 in the Glover equation, we can compute the depth z
0
of the freshwater-saltwa-
ter interface beneath the shoreline:
z
22Qxρ
f
⋅⋅⋅
ρ
s
ρ
f
–() K⋅
-----------------------------
Qρ
f
⋅
ρ
s
ρ
f
–() K⋅
-----------------------------
2
+= Glover equation
W
Qρ
f
⋅
2ρ
s
ρ
f
–() K⋅
--------------------------------=
z
0
Qρ
f
⋅
ρ
s
ρ
f
–() K⋅
-----------------------------=
Salt-water intrusion 150
Hydrogeology, 431/531 - University of Arizona - Fall 2014 Dr. Marek Zreda
Pumping of coastal aquifer
Pumping results in declining water table (cone of depression). Because for every meter of drop of
the water table the salt water will rise 40 m (see Ghyben-Herzberg equation), the depth to fresh-
water-saltwater interface will decrease fast and so will the volume of freshwater in the aquifer.
Thus, pumping near a coast must be designed carefuly so that the depth to the saltwater-freshwa-
ter interface be preserved. One way of doing so is by using injection wells installed between the
shoreline and the pumping wells (left figure). Injected water will push the interface towards the
sea. Some injected water will be lost to the sea, but no sea water will be allowed to flow past the
barrier. Often multiple wells are arranged along a line, forming a gallery of wells (right figure).