Ground Water and Hydrology
Ground Water and Hydrology
Ground Water and Hydrology
UNIT 1
Ground water
Ground water is the water present beneath the Earth’s surface in soil pore
spaces and in the fractures of rock formation.
Capillary water:
Below the hygroscopic layer is the capillary fringe held in the pores by
force of surface tension or capillarity. Plants receive water and most of nutrients
from this fringe.
Saturated zone:
After saturation, the excess water drains through the soil under the force
of gravity and builds up the ground water table. Occasionally a body of ground
water will be found above a bed of impervious material.
1. Igneous rocks:
Intrusive Igneous rocks:
These are generally very compact and dense and hence these are non porous
they are barren of ground water under normal condition .As a result they have
negligible porosity and permeability.
Weathering and fracturing decreases with depth (greater than 80 to 100m) and
disappears, no ground water can be expected in such rocks at great depths.
E.g. Granite, dolerite, syenite etc. ..
2.SEDIMENTARY ROCKS:
Among sedimentary rocks gravel posses the highest water retaining as well as
water yielding capacities.
In general next to gravel, the other sedimentary rocks in their successive order
of decreasing capacity are loose sand, sand stone, lime stone etc...
SANDSTONE:
Water bearing capacity depends much upon their texture and nature of
cementing material, coarse grained sandstone may be good aquifer, fine grained
sandstone may prove to be the poorest aquifers.
LIMESTONES:
The dense and fine grained limestone, they have no primary porosity, but
solution cavities and channels are common in them which sometimes make
these rocks highly porous.
3. METAMORPHIC ROCKS:
Foliated and/or lineation, if present and well developed, may contribute some
porosity to metamorphic rocks. But as such rocks are formed under great
pressure. Primary porosity cannot be expected to be much .Among the foliated
form of metamorphic rocks; gneisses are less porous than schist.
Among the non foliated rocks, quartzite has very little porosity by virtue of
their compactness and granulose texture.
SOILS
1. Clay:
Clay and coarser material mixed with clay are generally porous, but there
are so small that they may be regarded as relatively impermeable. Clayey
soils can provide small domestic water supplies from shallow, large
diameter wells.
2. Alluvial deposits
Water courses consist of the alluvium that forms and underlines stream
channel, as well as forming the flood plain. Wells located in highly
permeable strata bordering streams produce large quantity of water.
Aquitard:
A geological formation through which only seepage is possible, yield
insignificant.
(Partly permeable)
E.g. Sandy clay
TYPES OF AQUIFERS
Aquifers vary in depth, lateral extent and thickness: but in general aquifers fall
into one of the two categories i.e. unconfined and confined aquifers.
1. UNCONFINED AQUIFERS:
Unconfined aquifers are also called non artesian aquifers and are the top
most water bearing strata having no confined impermeable over burden layer
over them.
The ordinary gravity well of 2 to 5 m diameter, which are excavated through
such top most aquifers, are known as unconfined wells. The water level in water
table as shown in figure. Such wells therefore also known as water table wells
or gravity wells.
2. CONFINED AQUIFERS:
When aquifers are ceased on its upper and under surface by impervious
rocks formation (aquiclude) and in this the catchment area at higher level for
the creation of sufficient hydraulic head. It is called confined aquifers or
artesian aquifers.
A well excavated through an aquifers yield water that often flows out
automatically, under the hydrostatic pressure.
There are at least four geological requirements which are essential to be fulfilled
for the development of artesian conditions in a given region they are:
Aquifers enclosed b/w two impervious beds.
Exposure of the rim of the aquifer in the upper reaches of catchment area,
so as to enable the aquifer to receive constant recharge for the successful
supply.
Adequate rainfall in the catchment.
No other means for the escape or leakage of water except the proposal
well such as spring.
4) Meteoric water
Meteoric water is the water derived from precipitation (snow and rain). This
includes water from lakes, rivers, and ice melts, which all originate from
precipitation indirectly.
The ground water occurs in many types of geological formations which are
known as aquifers and are of most important. An aquifer may be defined as a
formation that contains sufficient saturated permeable material to yield significant
quantities of water to wells and springs. Thus an aquifer as the ability to store and
transmit the water.
Aquifer parameters:
The quantity of water stored by the aquifer and the quantity of water
released by the aquifer depends upon the nature and composition of the aquifer
which are quantified through certain parameters like porosity, Specific yield,
Storage coefficient, Permeability and transmissibility, these parameters are called as
aquifer parameters.
Where,
Wy - volume of water drained
It should be noted that fine grained materials yield little water, where as
coarse grained material permit a substantial release of water and hence serve
as aquifers.
(Sr= Wr/ v)
Where,
Wr - volume occupied by retained water.
V- Bulk volume of the soil or rock.
Volume of water is retained by molecular and surface tension forces against the force
of gravity, the specific retention increases with decrease grain size.
3. POROSITY (n):
Porosity is the ratio of the volume of voids or pores in a soil mass to its total
volume.
(n= Vv/ v)
&
1. In sediments the porosity depends on grain size, the shape of the grains, the degree of
sorting and degree of cementation.
2. In rocks the porosity depends upon the extent, spacing and pattern of cracks and
fractures.
3. Well –rounded coarse grained sediments usually have higher porosity than fine
grained sediments, because the grains don’t fit together well.
COEFFICIENT OF PERMEABILITY
The coefficient of permeability (K) is the rate of flow per unit cross sectional
area under unit hydraulic gradient (at a specified temperature) and is usually
expressed as m/sec, cm/sec, m/day and lpd/m2 (liters per day/m2).
Factors affecting permeability,
1. size soil particle and shape
2. structural arrangement of soils and voids ratio etc.,
Where,
C - Constant.
𝐷 - Effective size of the formation material (aquifer)
e - Voids ratio
𝛾𝑤 - Unit weight of water at the flow temperature.
𝜇 - Viscosity of water at the flow temperature
TRANSMISSIBILTY
The term transmissibility is widely employed in ground water hydraulics.
Transmissibility may be defined as the rate at which water of prevailing
kinematic viscosity is transmitted through a unit width of aquifer under a unit
hydraulic gradient.
(T= Kb)
(b = saturated thickness of aquifer)
Confined aquifer
Where,
P- Pressure
𝛾 - Specific gravity of water
g- Acceleration due to gravity
v- Velocity of flow
Because of velocity in porous media is low, so velocity is neglected
hL = (P1/ 𝛾) +z1 - (P2/ 𝛾)+z2
Q = - KA (hL/L)
Q = - KA (dh/dl)
Or
V= Q/A =- K (dh/dl)
K – Hydraulic conductivity
The negative sign indicates that the flow of water is in the direction of decreasing
head.