Abstract
Hydraulic tomography (HT) has been proven to be an effective approach in mapping the heterogeneity of hydraulic parameters. The travel-time based inversion (TTI) and geostatistical inversion (GI) approaches are two of several interpretation methods for HT data. In particular, GI is used to estimate heterogeneous hydraulic conductivity (K) and specific storage (Ss) tomograms, while TTI yields the diffusivity (D = K/Ss) tomogram. The main objective of this paper is to compare the performances of these two methods through a synthetic study. Two cases are designed based on different monitoring configurations. In each case, two independent scenarios are designed as: (1) providing the same dataset, and (2) providing datasets based on recommended strategies for each inversion approach. Then, the estimated tomograms are evaluated by direct comparison of estimated parameter distributions and assessment of model validation results. Comparison results show that the advantages of TTI are: (1) imaging of structural features representing high-D zones; and (2) requirement of less data for inverse modeling. In contrast, the advantages of GI are: (1) estimation of parameters throughout the simulation domain; (2) better characterization of low-D zones; and (3) generating the best estimated tomogram leading to best drawdown predictions. Collectively, our study suggests that TTI is suitable for rapid, coarse characterization of heterogeneity that could be utilized for providing hydrogeological structures for GI as an initial model. GI is more robust and preferable to applications that require higher accuracy in parameter estimation over a larger volume.
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