Lecture 15 - GW Hydrology
Lecture 15 - GW Hydrology
Lecture 15 - GW Hydrology
LECTURE 15
GROUND WATER HYDROLOGY
Vadose/ Root Zone (0.5-1.5 m) / Soil water ( water retained by roots of vegetation)
Unsaturated/
Aeration Zone Intermediate zone (for deep WT, water in this zone flows under gravity)
Lithosphere
WT Capillary zone ( water retained by Capillary force)
Saturated/
Phreatic Aquifer (All interstices filled with water)
Zone
Both zones in the soil are divided by an irregular surface known as water table
Above water table occurs vadose zone and below it occurs saturated zone
Water table is a locus of points (in an unconfined aquifer) where hydrostatic pressure equals
atmospheric pressure
Water table does not remain fixed
It fluctuates with precipitation events
It follows the topography
It flows
WATERTABLE
Water table is not stagnant it rises and falls in elevation depending on the rain fall.
It rains different at different patches in the land. Difference in the levels of WT in two adjacent lands creates
slope.
That slope also causes the ground water to flow towards lower level.
IMPORTANT TERMINOLOGY
Aquifer: a geological formation that contains water and also allows to transmit
water from one point to another under ordinary field conditions.
(for depths more than 3Km a little water is found due to smaller pores and high
pressure)
Aquiclude: A geological formation that contains water but does not allow water to
transmit sufficiently
Aquifuge: A geological formation which neither contain any water nor allow any
transmission of water through them. Rock formation are an example of such
formations
TYPES OF AQUIFERS
Unconfined Aquifers:
These are the aquifers into which water seeps directly from the ground above them
Also known as non-artesian or water table aquifers
A special case of unconfined aquifers is PERCHED WATER bodies. This occurs whenever a
ground water body is separated from main water table by a relatively impermeable strata.
TYPES OF AQUIFERS
Confined Aquifers:
Such an aquifer which remains overladen by an impermeable strata
Aquiclude/Aquifuge/Aquitard.
In this type of aquifer water can not seep directly from the ground
above. Instead there are certain recharge points wherever this strata is
exposed to ground surface.
Water is under pressure in this aquifer
Also known as Artesian Aquifer
TYPES OF AQUIFERS
In 1856 Darcy confirmed the applicability of fluid flow in capillary tubes to the flow of water in permeable
media.
Darcy’s Law states that velocity of flow through a porous media is proportional to the hydraulic gradient or
𝑑ℎ
V= - k.i 𝑉∝𝑖 where 𝑖 =
𝑑𝐿
Flow rate through a porous media is proportional to head loss (head difference) and inversely proportional
to flow path length
This law is sometimes also stated as
Negative sign indicates that flow is
V=-k.i in direction of decreasing head
Q=-k.i.A
DARCY’S LAW
Q
Darcy’s law is applicable for laminar flow (RN ≤ 1) Q
𝜌𝑣𝐷 𝑣𝐷
𝑅𝑁 = = where D is grain diameter ∆h
𝜇 𝜗
𝑑ℎ ℎ2− ℎ1 h1
𝑖= = h2
𝑑𝐿 𝐿
A= x-sectional area of specimen =𝛿 x. 𝛿y
−𝐾(ℎ2− ℎ1 )
𝑄= .𝐴
𝐿
L Porous Medium
𝑄
𝑉𝑎 = 𝐴𝑝 = 𝑛. 𝐴 = 𝑛. 𝛿x. 𝛿y
𝐴𝑝
Va is actual seepage velocity 𝛿y
𝑉𝑜𝑙.𝑜𝑓 𝑣𝑜𝑖𝑑𝑠
n is porosity (n= 𝑇𝑜𝑡𝑎𝑙 𝑣𝑜𝑙𝑢𝑚𝑒 𝑜𝑓 𝑠𝑜𝑖𝑙)=(0.25-0.75) 𝛿x
Cross Section of Porous Medium
DARCY’S LAW
A.v = K.i.A
Q = K.i.A
where
Q is discharge
K is hydraulic conductivity
i is hydraulic gradient
A is area
SPECIFIC RETENTION
n = Sy +Sr
n is porosity. Porosity is a measure of water storage capacity of a
formation. Not all the water held in the pores is available for
extraction by pumping or drainage by gravity. The pores hold back
some water by molecular attraction and surface tension, called
Specific Retention.
SPECIFIC YIELD
T= K.b
STORATIVITY OR STORAGE COEFFICIENT OR COEFFICIENT OF
STORAGE
Afzal GW Modeling
MEASUREMENT OF HYDRAULIC PARAMETERS OF AQUIFER
1. Lab test
𝑄
1. Constant head permeability test (hydraulic conductivity of granular soils 𝐾 = )
𝑖.𝐴
In 1935 Theis presented a formula based on the heat flow analogy which accounts for the effect of time and storage
characteristics of the aquifer.
𝑄 ∞ 𝑒 −𝑢
His formula is 𝑍= 𝑑𝑢 --------(a)
4𝜋𝑇 𝑢 𝑢
Where “Z’ “ is drawdown in an observation well at distance “r” from the pumping well, Q is the discharge in cubic ft
per day, “T” is transmissivity in cubic ft per day per foot and “u” is given by
𝑟 2 .𝑆
𝑢= 4𝑇𝑡
Values of W(u) corresponding to various values of “u” are given in tables (see lab manual).
According to Theis if discharge “Q” is constant then there lies a proportionality between these equations
𝑟2 4𝑇 𝑄
= .𝑢 and 𝑍= 𝑊(𝑢)
𝑡 𝑆 4𝜋𝑇
These two equation can be solved graphically by plotting “TYPE CURVE ” between u and W(u) and “DRAWDOWN
𝑟2
CURVE” for field conditions between and 𝑍 obtained from field observation (well test)
𝑡
The two curves superimposed, keeping their axes parallel until some part of the graphs coincide.
Any point from the overlap may be selected as MATCH POINT. Find out values from all four axes (u, W, r2/t, Z) and
use them in above equations to get Transmissivity and Storativity
𝑄 4𝑇
𝑇= 𝑊(𝑢), and S= 𝑟2
.𝑢
4𝜋𝑍 (𝑡)
MODIFIED THEIS FORMULA
In cases where “u” is small in equation terms following ln u are small and may be neglected
𝑢2 𝑢3
𝑊 𝑢 = −0.5772 − ln 𝑢 + 𝑢 − + 3.3! − ⋯……
2.2!
u can be small when “t ” is large as
𝑟 2 .𝑆
𝑢= 4𝑇𝑡
In this case a modified Theis solution may be used by writing
𝟐.𝟑 𝑸 𝒕
𝑻 = 𝟒𝝅∆𝒛 𝒍𝒐𝒈 𝒕𝟐-----(b) Where ∆𝑧 is change in drawdown between t1 and t2
𝟏
Drawdown (Z) is plotted on an Arithmetic Scale against time (t) on Log Scale
∆𝑧 is noted down as change in one log step (log10 (t2/t1)=1) then T can be determined from equation (b)
Similarly
2.25 𝑇 𝑡0 Where to intercept in days when straight line graph is extended to Z=0
𝑆= 𝑟2
MODIFIED THEIS METHOD
Z,m
to
MERITS OF THEIS METHOD
Carry out Example 6.1, 6.2 from Hydrology for Engineers, by Linsely