Well Design
Well Design
Well Design
Terminologies
Aquifer – is a formation that contains significant amount of water that can be
transmitted at sufficient rates.
Aquiclude – a saturated formation that contains relatively impermeable material
that does not yield appreciable quantities of water. It may serve as confining
layer for some aquifers.
Aquitard – saturated but poorly permeable stratum that impedes groundwater
movement. It does not yield water freely to wells but may transport water to or
from adjacent aquifer. It occupies an intermediate position bet. Aquifer and
aquiclude.
Aquifer Classification
Confined – is bounded above and below by a relatively impermeable layer.
Unconfined – is s permeable bed overlying a relatively impervious layer. Its upper
boundary is formed by a free water table or phreatic level under atmospheric
pressure.
Leaky or semi-confined – is overlain & underlain by a relatively impermeable
layer. Lowering the piezometric head will tend to generate a vertical flow of
water from a semi-pervios layer into the pumped aquifer.
Perched aquifer – when a groundwater is separated by a concaved upward
impermeable layer. This is a special type of water table aquifer with small areal
extent. A well penetrating a perched aquifer may be exhausted during dry months
or when intensive pumping is done.
Aquifer Characteristics
Specific Retention – Not all groundwater present in the aquifer can be withdrawn
or removed through pumping or drainage. A portion of the stored water is tightly
held by the adhesive forces between the soil particles and the soil molecules.
Specific retention is the measure of the water retained by the soil formation
against gravity. Fine-grained soils generally retain more water than coarse-grained
ones.
Specific Yield - The volume of water yield per unit volume of the formation is
termed as the specific yield of the aquifer. It gives an estimates of the available
water supply due to an increment of rise in the water table during the period of
recharge, as well as the water can be extracted for each incremental lowering of
the water table.
Storage Coefficient – the water yield in an unconfined aquifer has a counterpart in
confined aquifers known as storage coefficient. Even with the removal of water,
saturated condition remains in an artesian aquifers. Water withdrawal is reflected
mainly in the change in pjezometric head and the slight change in the aquifer
volume due to aquifer compression from overlying layer.
Conductivity or Permeability - Permeability or aquifer conductivity refers to the
capacity of a porous medium to allow fluid to flow through a cross-sectional area.
It is a measure of the ease with which an aquifer will transmit water. It is
influenced by both the properties of water (viscosity) and the aquifer materials
(e.g. porosity, particle size distribution, degree of packing and stratification).
Transmissibility - in confined aquifer, the product of aquifer thickness and
hydraulic conductivity is referred to as transmissibility. It is a measure of
potential discharge rate of well penetrating an aquifer. The magnitude of
transmissibility is, therefore, an indication of the economic value of an aquifer.