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  1. Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur
  2. Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 69
  3. Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 69, Issue 1, February 2010
  4. Impact of an impervious shallow gallery on groundwater flow
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Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 76
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 75
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 74
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 73
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 72
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 71
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 70
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 69
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 69, Issue 4, November 2010
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 69, Issue 3, August 2010
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 69, Issue 2, May 2010
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 69, Issue 1, February 2010
Performance and analysis of pumping tests in a gravel formation
Excavatability assessment of rock masses using the Geological Strength Index (GSI)
An alternative rock mass classification system for rock slopes
Effect of grain crushing and bedding plane inclination on Aqaba sand behavior
The determination of the mineralogical alteration index and the investigation of the efficiency of the hydrothermal alteration on physico-mechanical properties in volcanic rocks from Köprülü, Afyonkarahisar, West Turkey
Safety assessment of abandoned tailings ponds: an example from Kirki mines, Greece
Significance of saturated clays seams for the stability of rainfall-induced landslides
Deformation mechanism of a shallow double-arch tunnel in a sloping rock mass
Engineering geology and stability of the Jishixia landslide, Yellow River, China
Determining areas of leakage in the Da Ye Dam using multi-electrode resistivity
Evaluation of the geology-environmental capacity of buildings based on the ANFIS model of the floor area ratio
Contamination potential of tar sand exploitation in the western Niger-Delta of Nigeria: baseline studies
Field studies of the effectiveness of dynamic compaction in coastal reclamation areas
Groundwater quality assessment of Dhanbad district, Jharkhand, India
Impact of an impervious shallow gallery on groundwater flow
Estimation of Atterberg limits and bulk mass density of an expansive soil from P-wave velocity measurements
Discussion on the paper entitled “Property attribution of 3D geological models in the Thames Gateway, London: new ways of visualizing geoscientific information” doi:10.1007/s10064-008-0171-0
Reply to discussion by J. N. Hutchinson on the paper “Property attribution of 3D geological models in the Thames Gateway, London: new ways of visualising geo-scientific information”
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 68
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 67
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 66
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 65
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 64
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 63
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 62
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 61
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 60
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 59
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 58
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 57
Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur : Volume 55

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Impact of an impervious shallow gallery on groundwater flow

Content Provider Springer Nature Link
Author Deveughèle, Michel Zokimila, Pierre Cojean, Roger
Copyright Year 2009
Abstract On étudie la modification de la surface piézométrique d’une nappe, initialement en écoulement uniforme, liée à la présence d’un ouvrage linéaire d’axe horizontal perpendiculaire à la direction de l’écoulement. Pour une nappe captive, on propose des solutions analytiques approchées dans lesquelles la perte de charge supplémentaire introduite par l’ouvrage est proportionnelle au gradient hydraulique régional et fonction du rapport de la dimension de l’ouvrage à l’épaisseur de l’aquifère. Des simulations numériques établissent que, pour un milieu isotrope, la largeur d’influence de l’ouvrage, vers l’amont et l’aval est inférieure à trois fois le diamètre de l’ouvrage. On met en évidence l’importance d’une anisotropie des conductivités hydrauliques horizontale et verticale. Pour une nappe libre et un ouvrage entièrement submergé, une perturbation significative de la position de la surface libre de la nappe n’intervient que pour des valeurs relativement élevées du gradient hydraulique régional et lorsque la crête de l’ouvrage est proche de la surface libre.While many studies have been achieved on the interactions between groundwater and deep tunnels, in order to identify the evolution of pore pressure around the structure and to characterize the flow to its leaky parts, few studies have dealt with the impact of the carrying out of an impervious gallery in a shallow aquifer. The induced change in the piezometric level of the aquifer and the one in the hydraulic gradient of the flow however can, in this case, have significant consequences, in particular when the linear structure is located in an urban environment. This paper investigates, in steady state, the case of a straight tunnel having a horizontal axis perpendicular to the direction of the regional groundwater flow and a circular or square cross section. The aim is to determine the additional lost head Δh s due to the tunnel (i.e. additional to that resulting from the regional flow, supposed to be uniform with a hydraulic gradient i 0). In the context of a horizontal confined aquifer having a thickness 2B and of a tunnel of radius R located in the middle part of the aquifer, an analogy can be established with the flow above a hydraulic threshold resulting from a local rise of the elevation of the base of an aquifer, having a thickness B, on a width 2R and with a vertical maximum amplitude R. When neglecting the vertical component of the hydraulic gradient compared to its horizontal component, analytical solutions are developed for various hydraulic threshold shapes (rectangular, triangular and circular), based on the equivalence with a local change in the transmissivity of an aquifer keeping a constant thickness. The corresponding formulas take the form: $$ {\frac{{Δ h_{s} - Δ h_{0} }}{{Δ h_{0} }}} = f(a) $$ , with $$ a = {\frac{R}{B}} $$ and Δh 0 = 2Ri 0. The use of these formulas shows that the additional lost head Δh s due to the hydraulic threshold is proportional to i 0 and that, for values of the ratio a < 0.5, the change in the piezometric surface is small. These conclusions are therefore limited by the fact that the vertical conductivity is supposed to be very large. In order to remove this hypothesis, numerical simulations are achieved using the MODFLOW code. It is considered a confined aquifer of length 2L = 110 m and thickness B = 10 m, a ratio $$ a = {\frac{R}{B}} = 0.25 $$ and a horizontal hydraulic conductivity $$ K_{H} = 10^{ - 5} \,{\text{m}}\,{\text{s}}^{ - 1} $$ . In the case of an isotropic medium ( $$ \alpha = {\frac{{K_{H} }}{{K_{V} }}} = 1 $$ ), the simulations allow to check the linearity of the relationship between Δh s and i 0, with therefore a homogeneous variation in the proportionality coefficient compared to analytical solutions. Simulations also reveal that, in the case considered, the width of influence upstream and downstream L i, corresponding to a value of the vertical component of the hydraulic gradient <1% of i 0, is below 5.5R for the three hydraulic threshold shapes, and that it was few influenced by the hydraulic gradient i 0. In the case of an anisotropy of the horizontal and vertical hydraulic conductivities, simulations reveal the significant importance of the anisotropy ratio $$ \alpha = {\frac{{K_{H} }}{{K_{V} }}} $$ when it is more than 1, the most common case, and indicate that the proposed analytical solutions give an asymptotic value of $$ {\frac{{Δ h_{s} }}{{Δ h_{0} }}} $$ for the isotropic case and for the values of the component α < 1. In the context of an unconfined aquifer, the hydraulic threshold model is not directly applicable. The model studied, using the Dupuit-Forchheimer assumption, is the one of a water table aquifer with a sloped base (slope value: p 0). The simulations focus on an aquifer of length 2L = 85 m, with a tunnel of circular cross section having a diameter 2R = 5 m, bottom of which is located 5 m above the base of the aquifer, the isotropic hydraulic conductivity being equal to $$ K = 10^{ - 5} \,{\text{m}}\,{\text{s}}^{ - 1} $$ . The definitions of water heights d 0 and d between the water table and the top of the tunnel are given in Fig. 7. The water table can be located above (fully submerged tunnel) or below (partially emerged tunnel) the top of the tunnel. The difference d 0 − d represents the half of the additional lost head Δh s due to the tunnel. Simulations are performed for various values of p 0 and d 0. They provide the values of i 0, d and Δh s. In the case of a fully submerged tunnel (d > 0), a significant rise of the water table upstream of the tunnel is obtained only for high values of the hydraulic gradient (5 and 10%), but, even in this case, it remains less than the tenth of the wetted height of the aquifer h m. It is also highlighted that the ratio $$ {\frac{{Δ h_{s} }}{{i_{0} }}} $$ varies as a linear function of (R + d) and that, in the studied case, there is no influence of the tunnel for d ≥ 4R. In the case of a partially emerged tunnel (d < 0), the aquifer is locally confined under the tunnel. It is suggested that an equivalence is possible with the case of a confined aquifer having a thickness equal to the wetted height in the unconfined aquifer. This is verified with one of the simulations. In the case of a partially emerged tunnel, the change in the water table due to the tunnel remains low.
Starting Page 143
Ending Page 152
Page Count 10
File Format PDF
ISSN 14359529
Journal Bulletin of the International Association of Engineering Geology - Bulletin de l'Association Internationale de Géologie de l'Ingénieur
Volume Number 69
Issue Number 1
e-ISSN 14359537
Language English
Publisher Springer-Verlag
Publisher Date 2009-07-16
Publisher Place Berlin, Heidelberg
Access Restriction One Nation One Subscription (ONOS)
Subject Keyword Shallow aquifer Gallery Piezometric surface Lost head Hydraulic threshold Geoecology/Natural Processes Nature Conservation Geoengineering, Foundations, Hydraulics Applied Earth Sciences
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
Subject Geology Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
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