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A Tracer Method to Determine Hydraulic Conductivity and Effective Porosity of Saturated Clays Under Low Gradients
Author(s) -
Yeh YiJang,
Lee ChengHaw,
Chen ShihTsu
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
groundwater
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 94
eISSN - 1745-6584
pISSN - 0017-467X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-6584.2000.tb00244.x
Subject(s) - hydraulic conductivity , tracer , porosity , flow (mathematics) , geotechnical engineering , conductivity , slug test , materials science , soil science , mechanics , geology , mineralogy , chemistry , soil water , physics , nuclear physics
Based on the column tracer test, we developed a research method to determine the hydraulic conductivity and effective porosity of saturated clays under low hydraulic gradients or small flow rates. Derived from Darcy's law and the solute transport equation, this method evaluates the hydraulic conductivity through measuring solute concentrations rather than by measuring flow rates. And the effective porosity is determined by applying an analytical solution of the one‐dimensional uniform flow equation. Two types of experimental data drawn from a review of the literature and four sorts of accuracy test data carried out in the laboratory are used to examine the proposed method. The reproducibilities of accuracy tests for hydraulic conductivity determination indicate a consistency within a 5.5% error margin. The experimental results further indicate that hydraulic conductivities determined using the tracer method are more precise than those from the conventional flowmeter method. In addition, with the assistance of the proposed tracer method, we argue that the effective porosities may be overestimated as shown in the drawn example cases due to mistaking total pore volumes as the effective pores. The results of the accuracy tests further indicate that the effective porosities of saturated clay specimens are significantly smaller than the total porosities, at least when the samples are allowed to swell freely.

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