scholarly journals Groundwater flow and heat transport for systems undergoing freeze-thaw: Intercomparison of numerical simulators for 2D test cases

2018 ◽  
Vol 114 ◽  
pp. 196-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Grenier ◽  
Hauke Anbergen ◽  
Victor Bense ◽  
Quentin Chanzy ◽  
Ethan Coon ◽  
...  
Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (19) ◽  
pp. 6241
Author(s):  
Manon Bulté ◽  
Thierry Duren ◽  
Olivier Bouhon ◽  
Estelle Petitclerc ◽  
Mathieu Agniel ◽  
...  

A numerical model was built using FEFLOW® to simulate groundwater flow and heat transport in a confined aquifer in Brussels where two Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage (ATES) systems were installed. These systems are operating in adjacent buildings and exploit the same aquifer made up of mixed sandy and silty sublayers. The model was calibrated for groundwater flow and partially for heat transport. Several scenarios were considered to determine if the two ATES systems were interfering. The results showed that a significant imbalance between the injection of warm and cold water in the first installed ATES system led to the occurrence of a heat plume spreading more and more over the years. This plume eventually reached the cold wells of the same installation. The temperature, therefore, increased in warm and cold wells and the efficiency of the building’s cooling system decreased. When the second ATES system began to be operational, the simulated results showed that, even if the heat plumes of the two systems had come into contact, the influence of the second system on the first one was negligible during the first two years of joint operation. For a longer modeled period, simulated results pointed out that the joint operation of the two ATES systems was not adapted to balance, in the long term, the quantity of warm and cold water injected in the aquifer. The groundwater temperature would rise inexorably in the warm and cold wells of both systems. The heat plumes would spread more and more over the years at the expense of the efficiency of both systems, especially concerning building’s cooling with stored cold groundwater.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 805-805
Author(s):  
Wei-shi Wang ◽  
Sascha E. Oswald ◽  
Thomas Gräff ◽  
Hermann-Josef Lensing ◽  
Tie Liu ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesus Alberto Casillas-Trasvina ◽  
Bart Rogiers ◽  
Koen Beerten ◽  
Laurent Wouters ◽  
Kristine Walraevens

Abstract. Heat is a naturally occurring widespread groundwater tracer that can be used to identify flow patterns in groundwater systems. Temperature measurements, being relatively inexpensive and effortless to gather, represent a valuable source of information which can be exploited to reduce uncertainties on groundwater flow, and e.g. support performance assessment studies on waste disposal sites. In a lowland setting, however, hydraulic gradients are typically small, and whether temperature measurements can be used to inform us about catchment-scale groundwater flow remains an open question. For the Neogene aquifer in Flanders, groundwater flow and solute transport models have been developed in the framework of safety and feasibility studies for the underlying Boom Clay Formation as potential host rock for geological disposal of radioactive waste. However, the simulated fluxes by these models are still subject to large uncertainties, as they are typically constrained by hydraulic heads only. In the current study we use a state-of-the-art 3D steady-state groundwater flow model, calibrated against hydraulic head measurements, to build a 3D transient heat-transport model, for assessing the use of heat as an additional state variable, in a lowland setting, at the catchment scale. We therefore use temperature-depth (TD) profiles as additional state variable observations for inverse conditioning. Furthermore, a Holocene paleo-temperature time curve was constructed based on paleo-temperature reconstructions in Europe from several sources in combination with land-surface temperature (LST) imagery remote sensing monthly data from 2001 to 2019 (retrieved from NASA’s MODIS). The aim of the research is to understand the mechanisms of heat transport and to characterize the temperature distribution and dynamics in the Neogene aquifer. The simulation results clearly underline advection/convection and conduction as the major heat transport mechanisms, with a reduced role of advection/convection in zones where flux magnitudes are low, which suggests temperature is a useful indicator also in a lowland setting. Furthermore, performed scenarios highlight the important roles of i) surface hydrological features and withdrawals driving local groundwater flow systems, and ii) the inclusion of subsurface features like faults in the conceptualization and development of hydrogeological investigations. These findings serve as a proxy of the influence of advective transport and barrier/conduit role of faults, particularly the Rauw Fault in this case, and suggest that solutes released from the Boom Clay might be affected in similar ways.


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larry Dyke ◽  
Paul Egginton

Well-graded tills are a common surficial material over much of the Canadian Arctic from northern Manitoba to Somerset Island. The compactibility and bearing strength of these tills when thawed appear to be controlled by groundwater flow in the active layer. Water seeping from bedrock outcrops flanked by till enters the till active layer and flows via macropores formed as ice lenses thaw. This flow appears to retard consolidation of the till. Slopes having no seepage source consolidate more rapidly. This seepage maintains the till in a state highly susceptible to liquefaction and would yield material with a moisture–density condition unsuitable for construction use. Key words: till, surficial, compactibility, bearing capacity, groundwater, seepage, freeze–thaw, liquefaction.


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 657-673 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masoumeh Shojae Ghias ◽  
René Therrien ◽  
John Molson ◽  
Jean-Michel Lemieux

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