Groundwater flow monitoring using time-lapse electrical resistivity and self potential data

2021 ◽  
pp. 104411
Author(s):  
Lige Bai ◽  
Zhaofa Zeng ◽  
Hui Liu ◽  
Jiawei Tan ◽  
Tianqi Wang
Geosciences ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert ◽  
Paulus ◽  
Bolly ◽  
Koo Seen Lin ◽  
Hermans

Since salt cannot always be used as a geophysical tracer (because it may pollute the aquifer with the mass that is necessary to induce a geophysical contrast), and since in many contaminated aquifer salts (e.g., chloride) already constitute the main contaminants, another geophysical tracer is needed to force a contrast in the subsurface that can be detected from surface geophysical measurements. In this context, we used heat as a proxy to image and monitor groundwater flow and solute transport in a shallow alluvial aquifer (< 10 m deep) with the help of electrical resistivity tomography (ERT). The goal of our study is to demonstrate the feasibility of such methodology in the context of the validation of the efficiency of a hydraulic barrier that confines a chloride contamination to its source. To do so, we combined a heat tracer push/pull test with time-lapse 3D ERT and classical hydrogeological measurements in wells and piezometers. Our results show that heat can be an excellent salt substitution tracer for geophysical monitoring studies, both qualitatively and semi-quantitatively. Our methodology, based on 3D surface ERT, allows to visually prove that a hydraulic barrier works efficiently and could be used as an assessment of such installations.


Geophysics ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
pp. E239-E250 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilaria Coscia ◽  
Niklas Linde ◽  
Stewart Greenhalgh ◽  
Tobias Vogt ◽  
Alan Green

The infiltration of river water into aquifers is of high relevance to drinking-water production and is a key driver of biogeochemical processes in the hyporheic and riparian zone, but the distribution and quantification of the infiltrating water are difficult to determine using conventional hydrological methods (e.g., borehole logging and tracer tests). By time-lapse inverting crosshole ERT (electrical resistivity tomography) monitoring data, we imaged groundwater flow patterns driven by river water infiltrating a perialpine gravel aquifer in northeastern Switzerland. This was possible because the electrical resistivity of the infiltrating water changed during rainfall-runoff events. Our time-lapse resistivity models indicated rather complex flow patterns as a result of spatially heterogeneous bank filtration and aquifer heterogeneity. The upper part of the aquifer was most affected by the river infiltrate, and the highest groundwater velocities and possible preferential flow occurred at shallow to intermediate depths. Time series of the reconstructed resistivity models matched groundwater electrical resistivity data recorded on borehole loggers in the upper and middle parts of the aquifer, whereas the resistivity models displayed smaller variations and delayed responses with respect to the logging data in the lower part. This study demonstrated that crosshole ERT monitoring of natural electrical resistivity variations of river infiltrate could be used to image and quantify 3D bank filtration and aquifer dynamics at a high spatial resolution.


2009 ◽  
Vol 7 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 475-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Cassiani ◽  
A. Godio ◽  
S. Stocco ◽  
A. Villa ◽  
R. Deiana ◽  
...  

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