Bias in groundwater samples caused by wellbore flow

Journal of Hydraulic Engineering
By: , and 

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Abstract

Design of physical installations and sampling procedures for ground-water monitoring networks, particularly for detection and analysis of possible contaminants, is a topic of great scientific and practical interest at the present time. Recent practice in the design of monitoring networks associated with known contaminant sources sometimes includes an array of monitoring wells with long well screens (up to 50 feet or more). Numerical experiments with a detailed three-dimensional ground-water flow model indicate that significant wellbore flow can occur in contaminant monitoring wells with long well screens that are embedded in homogeneous aquifers with very small vertical head differences in the aquifer. This ``short circuiting'' of flow through boreholes should exist at some level on all scales. Consideration of the general flow pattern within the borehole, the flow pattern in the aquifer adjacent to the borehole, and the process of obtaining water samples from the borehole suggests that in many situations the practice of installing long well screens in contaminant monitoring wells should be abandoned.

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Bias in groundwater samples caused by wellbore flow
Series title Journal of Hydraulic Engineering
DOI 10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9429(1989)115:2(270)
Volume 115
Issue 2
Year Published 1989
Language English
Publisher ASCE
Description 7 p.
First page 270
Last page 276
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