Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Hydrogeophysical Methods for Analyzing Aquifer Storage and Recovery Systems
View through CrossRef
Hydrogeophysical methods are presented that support the siting and monitoring of aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) systems. These methods are presented as numerical simulations in the context of a proposed ASR experiment in Kuwait, although the techniques are applicable to numerous ASR projects. Bulk geophysical properties are calculated directly from ASR flow and solute transport simulations using standard petrophysical relationships and are used to simulate the dynamic geophysical response to ASR. This strategy provides a quantitative framework for determining site‐specific geophysical methods and data acquisition geometries that can provide the most useful information about the ASR implementation. An axisymmetric, coupled fluid flow and solute transport model simulates injection, storage, and withdrawal of fresh water (salinity ∼500 ppm) into the Dammam aquifer, a tertiary carbonate formation with native salinity approximately 6000 ppm. Sensitivity of the flow simulations to the correlation length of aquifer heterogeneity, aquifer dispersivity, and hydraulic permeability of the confining layer are investigated. The geophysical response using electrical resistivity, time‐domain electromagnetic (TEM), and seismic methods is computed at regular intervals during the ASR simulation to investigate the sensitivity of these different techniques to changes in subsurface properties. For the electrical and electromagnetic methods, fluid electric conductivity is derived from the modeled salinity and is combined with an assumed porosity model to compute a bulk electrical resistivity structure. The seismic response is computed from the porosity model and changes in effective stress due to fluid pressure variations during injection/recovery, while changes in fluid properties are introduced through Gassmann fluid substitution.
Title: Hydrogeophysical Methods for Analyzing Aquifer Storage and Recovery Systems
Description:
Hydrogeophysical methods are presented that support the siting and monitoring of aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) systems.
These methods are presented as numerical simulations in the context of a proposed ASR experiment in Kuwait, although the techniques are applicable to numerous ASR projects.
Bulk geophysical properties are calculated directly from ASR flow and solute transport simulations using standard petrophysical relationships and are used to simulate the dynamic geophysical response to ASR.
This strategy provides a quantitative framework for determining site‐specific geophysical methods and data acquisition geometries that can provide the most useful information about the ASR implementation.
An axisymmetric, coupled fluid flow and solute transport model simulates injection, storage, and withdrawal of fresh water (salinity ∼500 ppm) into the Dammam aquifer, a tertiary carbonate formation with native salinity approximately 6000 ppm.
Sensitivity of the flow simulations to the correlation length of aquifer heterogeneity, aquifer dispersivity, and hydraulic permeability of the confining layer are investigated.
The geophysical response using electrical resistivity, time‐domain electromagnetic (TEM), and seismic methods is computed at regular intervals during the ASR simulation to investigate the sensitivity of these different techniques to changes in subsurface properties.
For the electrical and electromagnetic methods, fluid electric conductivity is derived from the modeled salinity and is combined with an assumed porosity model to compute a bulk electrical resistivity structure.
The seismic response is computed from the porosity model and changes in effective stress due to fluid pressure variations during injection/recovery, while changes in fluid properties are introduced through Gassmann fluid substitution.
Related Results
Quantification of inter-aquifer flow in a Multi-Aquifer System Using Regional Groundwater Modeling: Northwestern Desert, Egypt
Quantification of inter-aquifer flow in a Multi-Aquifer System Using Regional Groundwater Modeling: Northwestern Desert, Egypt
Under severe water stress, intensified by the lack of rainfall and upstream regulation of freshwater, Egypt has little choice but to turn to alternative water resources, such as gr...
Reservoir Limit Test Under Aquifer Influence
Reservoir Limit Test Under Aquifer Influence
Abstract
Reservoir Limit Test (RLT) aims to obtain the volume of oil-in-place (VOIP), a valuable parameter at early stage of reservoir life. RLT is characterized ...
Aquifer Influx and Reservoir Connectivity Evaluation through Surveillance Data Analysis for a Large Sandstone Multi-Layered Reservoir
Aquifer Influx and Reservoir Connectivity Evaluation through Surveillance Data Analysis for a Large Sandstone Multi-Layered Reservoir
Abstract
M1 reservoir is a large multi-layered sandstone reservoir in Middle East, which is under primary depletion and edge aquifer drive. There are lots of sources...
Current therapeutic strategies for erectile function recovery after radical prostatectomy – literature review and meta-analysis
Current therapeutic strategies for erectile function recovery after radical prostatectomy – literature review and meta-analysis
Radical prostatectomy is the most commonly performed treatment option for localised prostate cancer. In the last decades the surgical technique has been improved and modified in or...
Method of Water Influx Identification and Prediction for a Fractured-Vuggy Carbonate Reservoir
Method of Water Influx Identification and Prediction for a Fractured-Vuggy Carbonate Reservoir
Abstract
Naturally fractured-vuggy carbonate reservoirs in China have some distinctive characteristics, which reservoir is a discontinuum and isolated developed. And...
Pumping-Induced Non-Darcian Flow in a Finite Confined Aquifer
Pumping-Induced Non-Darcian Flow in a Finite Confined Aquifer
An analytic model for depicting non-Darcian flow caused by pumping in a finite confined aquifer with an outer barrier boundary is established. The model considers the wellbore stor...
Evaluation of the Risk of Water Gushing(Inrush)in Aquifer of Coal Seam Roof Based on "Three Diagram Method" – a Case Study in Hu Jiahe Coal Mine,china
Evaluation of the Risk of Water Gushing(Inrush)in Aquifer of Coal Seam Roof Based on "Three Diagram Method" – a Case Study in Hu Jiahe Coal Mine,china
Abstract
Coal seam roof inrush phenomenon is common in Jurassic coalfield in China. In order to evaluate accurately the risk of coal seam roof water inrush (CSRWI) it needs...
Continental hydrosystem modelling: the concept of nested stream–aquifer interfaces
Continental hydrosystem modelling: the concept of nested stream–aquifer interfaces
Abstract. Recent developments in hydrological modelling are based on a view of the interface being a single continuum through which water flows. These coupled hydrological-hydrogeo...

