Poster: Modeling a heat tracer test in alluvial sediments using Monte Carlo: on the importance of the prior

Event: IAH Congress – Groundwater management and governance coping with water scarcity, Malaga (Spain), 2019
Poster by Richard Hoffmann, Alain Dassargues, Pascal Goderniaux, Thomas Hermans


Abstract

In hydrogeology, deterministic model calibrations are useful to understand the influence of parameters on the considered variables or to image large-scale spatial parameter distribution. Oftentimes, deterministic solutions bias the problem with too smoothed parameter distributions leading to unrealistic transport predictions with underestimated uncertainties.

Instead of predictions using an optimum parameterization in conjunction with reference data confirming the model, a realistic heterogeneity consideration is crucial for robust transport simulations and managing aquifer systems sustainable. Thus, using random generated models as multiple hypotheses (e.g. with Monte Carlo), then a hypothesis may be rejected, when the model does not confirm reference data (falsification step).

For that, the reference data set in this study is a heat tracer experiment in alluvial sediments (Belgium). Between an injection well and a pumping well 20 m apart, three observation panels are located at distances of 3, 8 and 15 m downgradient from the injection well. Each panel consists of 3 wells with screened intervals in the upper and lower aquifer parts. A deterministic calibration of the experiment on temperature data, using jointly HydroGeoSphere and PEST, hardly describes the experimental observations.

The resulting spatial hydraulic conductivity distribution (K) is probably too smooth. Instead, 250 realizations using Monte Carlo in combination with sequential gaussian simulation for the K-distributions define the prior (hypotheses). For the K-distribution two scenarios are used: (1) a random K-distribution with unknown mean, variance and spatial correlation and (2) the same approach but with a downwards increasing vertical trend for the K-distribution, to mimic the observed increasing grain sizes of the sediment with depth.

With Scenario 1, the prior range (250 simulations) surrounds the reference data (i.e. heat breakthrough curves) for most of the experiment, but not for the tailing. The prior generated using Scenario 2 (with the vertical K-trend) improves the simulation of the breakthrough tailings for panel 1 and 2. In panel 3 (15 m downgradient), simulations for the lower aquifer part show significant lower peaks than measured. Scenario 1 is falsified (rejected), because the prior (250 models) do not confirm the reference data, while scenario 2 is not-falsified till panel 2 (8 m downgradient). Scenario 2 addresses the heterogeneity of the test site more realistically than all previous unsatisfying deterministic attempts.

A global sensitivity analysis at panel 1 and 2 identifies then the spatial K-distribution and its variance as the most sensitive parameters. This confirms, that future efforts needed for panel 3, should focus on identification of heterogeneous patterns in the aquifer and their subsequent introduction in the model.

As a perspective, the use of a direct predictive framework (e.g. Bayesian Evidential Learning), avoiding the commonly used calibration procedure, promises robust decisions made by more realistic quantifications of the uncertainty caused by heterogeneity.


ESR11_IAH2019_MonteCarlo_Poster208_HoffmannEtAl


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Presentation: Fractured aquifer heterogeneity characterization for advanced transport modelling based on multiple single fracture tracer tests

Event: 45th IAH – Korea (International Association of Hydrogeologists), 2018
Presentation by Richard Hoffmann, Pascal Goderniaux, Angélique Poulain, Alain Dassargues


Abstract

Assessing fractured rocks, like a complex double porosity chalk, requires an advanced heterogeneity characterization and preferential pathway quantification. This contributes for reducing the uncertainty of transport predictions for protecting this excellent drinking water suppliers. With flowmeter tests and optical imaging, a horizontal main fracture between two adjacent 7.55 m distant wells is figured out. Injecting jointly 70 h heat and two solute pulses in a dipole configuration shows a strong heat delay and temperature rebound due to matrix reactions. Using dissolved gases jointly with a solute show, that the higher the tracer diffusivity the higher the confronted flow heterogeneity.

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Presentation: The double porosity of the chalk and its influence on solute and heat transport

Event: 6th International Geologica Belgica Meeting 2018
Presentation by Richard Hoffmann, Pascal Goderniaux, Pierre Jamin, Alain Dassargues


Abstract

Fractured rock aquifers like the Belgium chalk can act as important drinking water suppliers and for protection an advanced imaging of double porosity effects is important for transport predictions with reduced uncertainty. Between two adjacent 50 m-deep 7.55 m distant boreholes a with flowmeter tests and optical imagining figured out open main fracture is for multiple tracer tests isolated using an inflatable double packer system. Injecting in a dipole configuration continuously 50 °C hot water for 70 h jointly with two pulse fluorescent dye tracer (uranine) shows a 12.5 hours arrival delay of the heat compared to the solute. Stopping heat injection shows a strong direct temperature decrease followed by slow temperature rebound over several days. Stored heat around the injection well is pulled and the matrix reacts slowly by contribute stored heat to the colder water drawn from the surroundings.


ESR11_Abstract_GB2018_DoublePorChalk


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