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Comparisons of Three Methods to Determine the Vertical Stratification of Pore Fluids
Author(s) -
Taylor Kendrick,
Hess John,
Mazzella Aldo,
Hayworth Joel
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
groundwater monitoring and remediation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1745-6592
pISSN - 1069-3629
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-6592.1990.tb00325.x
Subject(s) - tracer , stratification (seeds) , dilution , annulus (botany) , geology , aquifer , piping , fluid dynamics , pore water pressure , porosity , porous medium , geotechnical engineering , mineralogy , groundwater , materials science , mechanics , environmental science , composite material , seed dormancy , physics , germination , botany , dormancy , environmental engineering , nuclear physics , biology , thermodynamics
Three methods were used to investigate the possibility of vertical stratification of the pore fluid in an aquifer. The wells available for the study were fully screened and had a 5cm disturbed annulus around them. The first method used a pump with a straddle packer to isolate a short section of the secreened interval. A tracer test demonstrated that most of the pumped sample came from the well bore, presumably by piping through the disturbed. annulus. The second method used induction logs to measure the formation electrical conductivity as a function of depth. Due to the presence of clays and an inability to obtain porosity information, it was not possible to determine the pore fluid electrical conductivity using induction logs. A third method, dilution sampling, was developed that used a straddle packer to isolate a segment of the well screen. A tracer was injected into the packed‐off segment, and the tracer concentration in the well was monitored. The tracer was removed from the packed‐off segment by dilution and advection by ground water. When the tracer was completely removed from the packed‐off segment, the fluid in the segment was considered to be representative of the adjacent pore fluid. Only the dilution sampling method determined unambiguously that the pore fluid was not stratified.