A suite of numerical models was applied to the problem of designing field tracer and bacterial injection experiments in a sandy surficial aquifer near Oyster, Virginia. The models were constructed based on the integration of diverse characterization data including hydrologic, geophysical, geological, and biological information. A one-dimensional particle-tracking model was used to analyze laboratory transport experiments conducted using intact core samples, in order to prescribe transport parameters describing solute dispersion and bacterial fate. A geostatistical model of three-dimensional hydraulic conductivity variations was developed, conditioned on in-situ measurements of hydraulic conductivity and interpretations of geophysical data, and used to generate alternative aquifer descriptions. A regional-scale two-dimensional flow model was used to design pumping rates of a forced-gradient hydraulic control system. Information from these various models was then combined into a high-resolution three-dimensional flow and transport model for the prediction of field-scale solute and bacterial transport. Model predictions were used in a staged manner to specify 1) the locations of multi-level samplers for monitoring transport, 2) frequency and timing of sample collection during bromide tracer injection experiments, and 3) frequency and timing of sample collection during a bacterial injection experiment. At each stage of the design, information gained during the previous stage was used to refine the model and target subsequent experimentation.
Revised: February 28, 2001 |
Published: March 1, 2001
Citation
Scheibe T.D., Y. Chien, and J. Radtke. 2001.Use of quantitative models to design microbial transport experiments in a sandy aquifer.Ground Water 39, no. 2:210-222.PNNL-SA-33029.