scholarly journals Hydrogeochemical Evolution of an Aquifer Regulated by Pyrite Oxidation and Organic Sediments

Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (17) ◽  
pp. 2444
Author(s):  
Eugenio Sanz ◽  
Catalina Bezares ◽  
Carlos Pascual ◽  
Ignacio Menéndez Pidal ◽  
Cristina Fonolla

Detailed full-scale groundwater monitoring was carried out over a period of nine years, sampling at selected points along the groundwater flow direction in its final stretch. This established the hydrogeochemical evolution along the flow of a natural system formed by a calcareous aquifer which discharges and then passes through a quaternary aquifer of lake origin which is rich in organic matter. This evolution is highly conditioned by the oxidation of pyrites that are abundant in both aquifers. In the first aquifer, one kilometre before the discharge location, oxidizing groundwater crosses a pyrite mineralization zone whose oxidation produces an important increase in sulphates and water denitrification over a short period of time. In the quaternary aquifer with peat sediments and pyrites, water experiences, over a small 500 m passage and residence time of between three and nine years, a complete reduction by way of pyrite oxidation, and a consequent increase in sulphates and the generation of hydrogen sulphuric acid. This is an example of an exceptional natural hydrogeological environment which provides guidance on hydrogeochemical processes such as denitrification.

Author(s):  
Yoshiaki Sakamoto ◽  
Hisao Izuchi ◽  
Naoko Suzuki

Reaction force of safety valves acting to the piping system is one of key factors for the piping system design around the safety valves. In case of open discharge system, it is well known that a large reaction force acts to the piping corresponding to the fluid momentum force at the atmospheric discharge. On the other hand, reaction forces for closed discharge system may be relatively small since the forces acting to the adjacent two points with flow direction change such as elbows and tees are balanced within very short period. However, large reaction forces may act as a result of unsteady flow just after the initial activation of the safety valve. API RP520 mentioned that a complex time history analysis of the piping system around the safety valves may be required to obtain the transient forces. This paper explains a method of a comprehensive dynamic simulation of piping system around safety valves taking interaction among the valve disc motion, the fluid transient for compressible flow and the piping structural dynamics into account. The simulation results have good agreement with the experimental data. The effectiveness of this method is confirmed throughout an application to actual piping system around safety valves.


Geofluids ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Qiding Ju ◽  
Yu Liu ◽  
Youbiao Hu ◽  
Yuquan Wang ◽  
Qimeng Liu ◽  
...  

Mining activities interfere into the natural groundwater chemical environment, which may lead to hydrogeochemical changes of aquifers and mine water inrush disasters. The study of hydrogeochemical evolution processes of underground aquifers is helpful to the prevention and control of mine water inrush. The results show that the study area is mainly impacted by four hydrogeochemical processes: dissolution, cation exchange, desulfurization and reduction, and pyrite oxidation. The Cenozoic aquifers are dominated by carbonate dissolution and desulfurization. The Permian aquifers are impacted mainly by cation exchange and sulfate dissolution, followed by pyrite oxidation. The Carboniferous aquifers are mainly impacted by dissolving sulfate, followed by pyrite oxidation and cation exchange. The hydrogeochemical evolution of the aquifers was controlled by mining activities and tectonic changes, and a certain regularity in space. For the Cenozoic aquifers, sulfate dissolution and cation exchange increase from west to east, and desulfurization weakens. For the Permian aquifers, cation exchange and sulfate dissolution are stronger near synclines and faults, pyrite oxidation is enhanced, and desulfurization decreases from the middle to the east of the mining area. For the Carboniferous aquifers, there is a higher dissolution of rock salt, pyrite oxidation, and cation exchange from west to east, and the desulfurization effect weakens.


Geophysics ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 192-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. White

The movement of 2000 liters of salt water after injection into groundwater within gravels a few meters below the ground surface at three injection sites was traced by six different resistivity monitoring arrays; the resistivity rectangle, Schlumberger sounding, Wenner sounding, Wenner fixed‐spacing, mise‐à‐la‐asse and downhole electrode array. Five of the arrays indicated groundwater flow direction and seepage velocity. As evidence indicates, similar geological and hydrogeological conditions exist at the injection sites. Therefore, comparisons between the sensitivity of the five arrays can be made and are as follows: resistivity rectangle—maximum decrease of 60 percent in derived potential differences; Schlumberger sounding— maximum decrease of 28 percent in measured apparent resistivity; Wenner sounding—maximum decrease of 20 percent in measured apparent resistivity, Wenner fixedspacing—maximum decrease of 22 percent in apparent resistivity; downhole electrode—maximum decrease of 38 percent in measured resistance. Measured potentials and derived values of potential gradient measured by the mise‐à‐la‐masse array indicated groundwater flow direction but not seepage velocity. Estimates of seepage velocity given by the resistivity arrays for the three salt water injection sites are between 260 ± 40 m/day and 700 ±100 m/day. These estimates are in broad agreement with values of seepage velocity derived from the point‐dilution technique, from previous salt water injection experiments, and from groundwater conductivity measurements using downhole probes.


Geophysics ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 59 (7) ◽  
pp. 1172-1172 ◽  

The author has noted an equation error in Fig. 2. The vertical anisotropic intrinsic permeability should be: [Formula: see text] In addition, a reference used in the paper was incomplete. The accurate information appears below and we regret the omission.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enrico Bonanno ◽  
Günter Blöschl ◽  
Julian Klaus

<p>Groundwater dynamics and flow directions in the near-stream zone depend on groundwater gradients, are highly dynamic in space and time, and reflect the flowpaths between stream channel and groundwater. A wide variety of studies have addressed groundwater flow and changes of flow direction in the near-stream domain which, however, have obtained contrasting results on the drivers and hydrologic conditions of water exchange between stream channel and near-stream groundwater. Here, we investigate groundwater dynamics and flow direction in the stream corridor through a spatially dense groundwater monitoring network over a period of 18 months, addressing the following research questions:</p><ul><li>How and why does groundwater table response vary between precipitation events across different hydrological states in the near-stream domain?</li> <li>How and why does groundwater flow direction in the near-stream domain change across different hydrological conditions?</li> </ul><p>Our results show a large spatio-temporal variability in groundwater table dynamics. During the progression from dry to wet hydrologic conditions, we observe an increase in precipitation depths required to trigger groundwater response and an increase in the timing of groundwater response (i.e. the lag-time between the onset of a precipitation event and groundwater rise). This behaviour can be explained by the subsurface structure with solum, subsolum, and fractured bedrock showing decreasing storage capacity with depth. A Spearman rank (r<sub>s</sub>) correlation analysis reveals a lack of significant correlation between the observed minimum precipitation depth needed to trigger groundwater response with the local thickness of the subsurface layer, as well as with the distance from and the elevation above the stream channel. However, both the increase in groundwater level  and the timing of the groundwater response are positively correlated with the thickness of the solum and subsolum layers and with the distance and the elevation from the stream channel, but only during wet conditions. These results suggest that during wet conditions the spatial differences in the groundwater dynamics are mostly controlled by the regolith depth above the fractured bedrock. However, during dry conditions, local changes in the storage capacities of the fractured bedrock or the presence of preferential flowpaths in the fractured schist matrix could control the spatially heterogeneous timing of groundwater response. In the winter months, the groundwater flow direction points mostly toward the stream channel also many days after an event, suggesting that the groundwater flow from upslope locations controls the near-stream groundwater movement toward the stream channel during wet hydrologic conditions. However, during dry-out or long recessions, the groundwater table at the footslopes decreases to the stream level or below. In these conditions, the groundwater fall lines point toward the footslopes both in the summer and in the winter and in different sections of the stream reach. This study highlights the effect of different initial conditions, precipitation characteristics, streamflow, and potential water inflow from hillslopes on groundwater dynamics and groundwater surface-water exchange in the near stream domain.</p>


1994 ◽  
Vol 376 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.J. Orts ◽  
J.-F. Revol ◽  
L. Godbout ◽  
R.H. Marchessault

ABSTRACTSmall angle neutron scattering, SANS, was used to describe the magnetic alignment and in situ shear ordering of polyelectrolytic, liquid crystalline cellulose microfibrils in aqueous (D2O) suspension. In a 2.4 Tesla magnetic field, microfibril suspensions exhibit anisotropic chiral nematic (cholesteric) ordering in which the distance between nematic planes along the cholesteric axis is shorter than between rods within a nematic plane. This is consistent with the hypothesis that cellulose microfibrils are helically twisted rods. During shear, the SANS interference peaks perpendicular to the flow direction sharpen with increasing shear rate. Yet, the highest degree of alignment (for microfibrils with axial ratios of ~45) was observed a short period after the cessation of shear flow.


2009 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-126
Author(s):  
Akhundzadah Noor AHMAD ◽  
Hirotaka SAITO ◽  
Kei ASADA ◽  
Makoto KATO

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