scholarly journals A three-dimensional variable-density spiral spatial-spectral RF pulse with rotated gradients

2010 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 828-834 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weiran Deng ◽  
V. Andrew Stenger
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eddie W. Banks ◽  
Saskia Noorduijn ◽  
Okke Batelaan ◽  
Vincent Post ◽  
Adrian Werner ◽  
...  

<p>Groundwater is the primary source of freshwater supply on remote small islands, where it exists as a freshwater lens. It is extremely vulnerable to over-extraction, pollution and seawater intrusion. Ensuring long-term sustainable management of the groundwater resource is of the utmost importance when there are growing water demands, sea-level rise and/or recharge decline. This study used a three-dimensional, variable-density numerical groundwater flow and solute transport model to investigate vulnerability of a freshwater lens in a multi-layered aquifer system on Milingimbi Island, a small tropical island in northern Australia. The model was used to explore the impacts and possibility of increased groundwater demand on the freshwater lens, its volume, geometry as well as the thickness of the transition zone. The risks of saltwater intrusion, both laterally from the ocean and by localised up-coning from the deeper, more saline aquifers beneath the freshwater lens, were also assessed. Model calibration used observed hydraulic heads and salinity observations from pumping and observation wells. Subsurface bulk conductivity values, which were calculated from inverted airborne electromagnetic (AEM) and near-surface geophysical data, were also used in the calibration process. The results showed that the hydraulic heads and observed salinity achieved the ‘best fit’ in the calibration process, whereas the addition of the geophysical data assisted in constraining the lens geometry in the steady state model and integrated the data poor areas based on traditional hydrogeological datasets. The models’ calibration sensitivity to the range of measured salinities could be enhanced by improving the conversion factor between the AEM-derived conductivity values and the observed salinity data. This would best be accomplished by targeted monitoring wells at discrete depths and locations across the lens and improvements in the sampling/restoration of existing ones. The numerical model provided a framework to evaluate the key underlying hydrogeological processes on the island, as well as an important decision-making tool to ensure a sustainable and reliable water supply for the island community.</p>


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martina Siena ◽  
Monica Riva

Abstract. We analyze the combined effects of aquifer heterogeneity and pumping operations on seawater intrusion (SWI) in coastal aquifers, a phenomenon which is threatening Mediterranean and worldwide regions. We conceptualize the aquifer as a three-dimensional randomly heterogeneous porous medium, where the spatial distribution of permeability is uncertain. The geological setting of our study is patterned after the coastal aquifer of the Argentona river basin, in the Maresme region of Catalonia (Spain). Numerical simulations of transient, three-dimensional, variable-density flow and solute transport are performed within a stochastic Monte Carlo framework. We consider a variety of groundwater withdrawal schemes, designed by varying the screen location along the vertical direction and the distance of the wellbore from the coastline and from the freshwater-saltwater mixing zone, in order to assess the impact of the pumping scenario on the contamination of the freshwater pumping well for a prescribed production rate. SWI is analyzed by examining isoconcentration curves and global dimensionless quantities characterizing (i) inland penetration of the saltwater wedge and (ii) width of the mixing zone. Our results indicate that heterogeneity affects the (three-dimensional) seawater wedge either in the presence or in the absence of pumping, by reducing toe penetration and enlarging the width of the mixing zone. Simultaneous extraction of fresh and saltwater from two screens along the same wellbore located within the transition zone is effective in limiting SWI during groundwater resources exploitation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 7628-7636
Author(s):  
D. Belakhal ◽  
Kouider Rahmani ◽  
Amel Elkaroui Elkaroui ◽  
Syrine Ben Haj Ayech ◽  
Nejla Mahjoub Saïd ◽  
...  

In the current investigation, numerical study of a thermal jet of asymmetric (rectangular and elliptical) and axisymmetric (circular) geometry was investigated with variable density to verify the impact of the ratio of density and geometry on the generation of entropy. The central jet was brought to different temperatures (194, 293 and 2110 K) to obtain density ratios (0.66, 1 and 7.2) identical to a mixture jet ((Air-CO2), (Air-Air) and (Air-He)), respectively. Solving the three-dimensional numerical resolution of the Navier Stocks for turbulent flow permanent enclosed on the turbulence model K-εstandard was made. The results acquired are compared with that carried out in previous experimental studies, where it was concluded that, the axisymmetric (circular) geometry increases the entropy generation.


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