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4 votes
A water well of diameter 100 mm has been bored into a horizontal confined aquifer of thickness b = 9.5 m and is fully penetrating (i.e. can take water from all levels within the aquifer). The water table is initially 24.2 m above the bottom of the well (lower confining layer). When the well is pumped at 150 litres per minute the draw-down is 1.6 m in a monitoring well r = 3.0 m away from the well. The hydraulic conductivity is K = 8.5 m/day.

Estimate:
the draw-down at r = 9.1 m from the well.
Answer: m (3 marks)

asked
User Ian Zhao
by
8.9k points

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

To estimate the drawdown at a distance of r = 9.1 m from the well, we can use the Theis equation for confined aquifers:

S = (Q / (4 * π * T)) * W(u)

Where:

S = Drawdown at the monitoring well (m)

Q = Pumping rate (m³/s)

T = Transmissivity of the aquifer (m²/s)

W(u) = Well function, which is a function of u = r² * S / (4 * K * t)

Given:

Q = 150 liters/minute = (150/1000) m³/60 s ≈ 0.0025 m³/s

T = 8.5 m/day = 8.5 / 86400 m²/s (convert to m²/s)

r = 3.0 m (distance to monitoring well)

S = 1.6 m (drawdown in the monitoring well)

K = 8.5 m/day = 8.5 / 86400 m/s (convert to m/s)

First, calculate u using the given values:

u = r² * S / (4 * K * t)

Now, calculate W(u) using the calculated u:

W(u) = -expint(-u)

Finally, estimate the drawdown at r = 9.1 m using the Theis equation:

S_estimated = (Q / (4 * π * T)) * W(u)

Plug in the values and calculate S_estimated.

Keep in mind that this calculation involves iterative methods for evaluating the well function. The result may vary slightly based on the method used.

answered
User Mickey Shine
by
8.0k points
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