Abstract

High-resolution characterization of complex dense non-aqueous phase liquid (DNAPL) contaminated sites is crucial for developing effective remediation strategies. The DNAPL source zone is usually characterized by hydraulic/partitioning tracer tomography (HPTT). However, the HPTT method may fail to capture the highly saturated pool-dominated DNAPL source zone architecture (SZA), because partitioning tracers tend to bypass the low-permeability zones where the pool DNAPL accumulates, resulting in a low-resolution DNAPL estimation. With a limited number of measurements, the estimation errors may be significant. To overcome these difficulties, time-lapse electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) was integrated with the partitioning interwell tracer test (PITT) and hydraulic tomography (HT) to characterize the pool-dominated DNAPL SZA. Herein, we proposed an iterative joint inversion framework coupling the multiphase flow model with the ERT forward model to estimate the heterogeneous permeability distribution and DNAPL SZA. Under this framework, permeability was estimated using the hydraulic head data from HT in stage 1, and the DNAPL SZA was subsequently estimated by assimilating both the PITT and ERT observations in stage 2. The permeability estimated from stage 1 was used as prior information for stage 2, and the DNAPL saturation estimated from stage 2 was served as prior information for stage 1 in the next loop to form an iterative loop to improve the estimation of both permeability and DNAPL SZA. The iterative joint inversion framework was evaluated in two numerical experiments with different heterogeneous structures by assimilating multi-source datasets, including hydraulic head, partitioning interwell tracer concentration, and electrical resistivity. Results show that with limited measurements of HPTT method, one can roughly capture the DNAPL distribution, missing the fine structure of the DNAPL SZA. In contrast, by incorporating multi-source datasets, the heterogeneous permeability and DNAPL SZA can be reconstructed with a higher resolution. Furthermore, the inversion accuracy of the DNAPL SZA improves progressively as the iteration proceeds, which demonstrates the advantage of utilizing complementary information from permeability and DNAPL distribution through the iteration framework. Comparing with the results without loop iteration, the estimation error is reduced by 17.3% for permeability and 8.6% for DNAPL saturation in Experiment 1; by 14.7% for permeability and 11.2% for DNAPL saturation in Experiment 2 through the iterative framework. To further evaluate our framework, we preformed the prediction of the depletion process of the DNAPL source zone and plume based on the estimated DNAPL SZA. Results show that using the iterative framework, the prediction of the SZA depletion is greatly improved, i.e., the estimation error of the dissolved downstream plume from the DNAPL source zone after 3 years is reduced by 20.9% in Experiment 1, and by 43.2% in Experiment 2, respectively, through the iterative framework. This significant improvement is because the iterative method can better capture the spread of DNAPL pool.

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.