Cross-borehole tomography with full-decay spectral time-domain induced polarization for mapping of potential contaminant flow-paths.


Journal

Journal of contaminant hydrology
ISSN: 1873-6009
Titre abrégé: J Contam Hydrol
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 8805644

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Oct 2019
Historique:
received: 12 11 2018
revised: 03 07 2019
accepted: 04 07 2019
pubmed: 6 8 2019
medline: 30 11 2019
entrez: 6 8 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Soil contamination from industrial activities is a large problem in urban areas worldwide. Understanding the spreading of contamination to underlying aquifers is crucial to make adequate risk assessments and for designing remediation actions. A large part of the northern hemisphere has quaternary deposits consisting of glacial clayey till. The till often has a complex hydrogeological structure consisting of networks of fractures, sand stringers and sand lenses that each contribute to a transport network for water, free phase and dissolved contaminants. Thus, to determine the possible flow-paths of contaminants, the geology must be described in great detail. Normally, multiple boreholes would be drilled in order to describe the geology, but boreholes alone do not provide the needed resolution to map such sand lenses and their connectivity. Cross-borehole full-decay time-domain induced polarization (TDIP) is a new tool that allows for quantitatively mapping not only contrasts in bulk resistivity, but also contrasts in spectral IP parameters. We present a feasibility study with synthetic tests and a field application on a clayey moraine environment with embedded sand lenses, with hitherto unseen ground-truth verification. Indeed, the investigated area was above the water table, which allowed for digging out the entire area after the investigation for an unprecedented description of the lens interconnectivity. The TDIP data were acquired with a full-waveform acquisition at high sampling rate, signal-processed by harmonic denoising, background removal, and de-spiking, and subsequently the full-waveform data were stacked in log-increasing tapered gates (with 7 gates per decade). The resulting TDIP decays, with usable time-gates as early as two milliseconds, were inverted in terms of a re-parameterization of the Cole-Cole model. The inverted models of the field data show a remarkable delineation of the sand lenses/layers at the site, with structure in both the resistivity and the IP parameters matching the results from the ground-truthing. The synthetic examples show that in models both below and above the groundwater table, sand-lenses with thicknesses comparable to the vertical electrode spacing can be well resolved. This suggests that full-decay cross-borehole TDIP is an ideal tool for high-resolution sand-lens imaging.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31382075
pii: S0169-7722(18)30362-0
doi: 10.1016/j.jconhyd.2019.103523
pii:
doi:

Substances chimiques

Soil Pollutants 0

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

103523

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Auteurs

Thue Sylvester Bording (TS)

HydroGeophysics Group, Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, Denmark. Electronic address: bording@geo.au.dk.

Gianluca Fiandaca (G)

HydroGeophysics Group, Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, Denmark. Electronic address: gianluca.fiandaca@geo.au.dk.

Pradip Kumar Maurya (PK)

HydroGeophysics Group, Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, Denmark. Electronic address: pradip.maurya@geo.au.dk.

Esben Auken (E)

HydroGeophysics Group, Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, Denmark. Electronic address: esben.auken@geo.au.dk.

Anders Vest Christiansen (AV)

HydroGeophysics Group, Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, Denmark. Electronic address: anders.vest@geo.au.dk.

Nina Tuxen (N)

Capital Region of Denmark, Denmark. Electronic address: nina.tuxen@regionh.dk.

Knud Erik Strøyberg Klint (KES)

GEO, Denmark.. Electronic address: kek@geo.dk.

Thomas Hauerberg Larsen (TH)

Orbicon, Denmark. Electronic address: thla@orbicon.dk.

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