Abstract
Summary Laboratory measurement of permeability using a Hassler cell is the industry standard; however, consistently removing undisturbed rock samples from friable outcrops is difficult. Although various conventional surface-sealing mini-permeameters are developed as an alternative for permeability measurement, these devices generally suffer from difficulties in maintaining optimal forces on the tip seal when dealing with outcrop irregularities in the field; outcrop weathering is also problematic. Because a reliable field method is needed for studies of friable geological units, this paper presents an innovative technique for measuring permeability in situ. The design of the small-drillhole minipermeameter probe is discussed, as well as the accompanying analytical technique and the size and shape of the instrument's averaging volume. Small-diameter holes [i.e., 1.8 cm (0.7 in.)] are drilled into an outcrop with a masonry drill, followed by drillhole vacuuming, probe insertion, seal expansion, gas injection, and calculation of the intrinsic permeability through measurement of the injection pressure, gas-flow rate, and knowledge of the system geometry. Advantages of this approach include access to a nonweathered surface, an operator-independent sealing mechanism around the air-injection zone, and the potential for permeability measurement at multiple depths below an outcrop surface. To date, data have been collected from four diverse porous media: upper and lower shoreface sandstone (Escalante, Utah), saprolitic soils (Clemson, South Carolina), nonwelded and sintered ignimbrite (Bishop, California), and fluvially reworked tuffaceous sedimentary rock (Bishop, California). The probe has proved durable and robust, with a single probe sufficient for making thousands of measurements in a variety of environments. Data quality supports the conclusion that the drillhole probe is a practical field instrument.
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