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Well Development and Efficiency
Groundwater Hydraulics
Daene C. McKinney
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Introduction• Well Drilling
– Augers– Cable Tool– Rotary– Mud
• Well Completion– Unconsolidated formations– Consolidated Formations– Well Screens– Gravel Packs
• Well Development– Well Drawdown– Well Losses– Specific Capacity– Step Drawdown Test– Well Efficiency
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Some History
• Qanats – Subterranean tunnels used to tap and
transport groundwater– Originally in Persia– Kilometers in length– Up to 3000 years old– Many still operating
• Chinese Salt Wells– 1000 years ago: Drilled wells– Over 300 meters deep– Bamboo to retrieve cuttings– By year 1858: 1000 meters deep– Called “cable tool” drilling today
Ancient Persian Qanat
Ancient Chinese Salt Well
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Domestic Hand Pumped Well
Domestic dug well with rock curb, concrete seal, and hand pump
~20 m depth> 1 m diameter< 500 m3/day
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AugersHand-driven augers
~15 m depth> 20 cm diameter
Power-driven augers
~30 m depth> 1 m diameter
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Power Auger
• Auger drilling is done with a helical screw driven into the ground with rotation; cuttings are lifted up the borehole by the screw
~ 30 m depth< 15-90 cm diameter< 500 m3/day
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Drilled Well - Cable Tool• Traditional way of
drilling large diameter water supply wells.
• The Rig raises and drops the drill string with a heavy carbide tipped drill bit that chisels through the rock and pulverizes the materials.
• 8 – 60 cm• 600 m
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Mud/Air Rotary• Rotary drilling relies on
continuous circular motion of the bit to break rock at the bottom of the hole.
• Cuttings are removed as drilling fluids circulate through the bit and up the wellbore to the surface.
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Drilling Mud Circulation• Lift soil/rock cuttings from the bottom of
the borehole and carry them to a settling pit;
• Allow cuttings to drop out in the mud pit so that they are not re-circulated (influenced by mud thickness, flow rate in the settling pits and shape/size of the pits);
• Prevent cuttings from rapidly settling while another length of drill pipe is being added (if cuttings drop too fast, they can build-up on top of the bit and seize it in the hole);
• Create a film of small particles on the borehole wall to prevent caving and to ensure that the upward-flowing stream of drilling fluid does not erode the adjacent formation;
• Seal the borehole wall to reduce fluid loss (minimizing volumes of drilling fluid is especially important in dry areas where water must be carried from far away);
• Cool and clean the drill bit; and • Lubricate the bit, bearings, mud pump and
drill pipe .
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Well Completion
• After drilling, must “complete” the well– Placement of casing– Placement of well screen– Placement of gravel
packing– Open hole
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Rotary Drill Well Construction• Well casing
– Lining to maintain open hole
– Seals out other water (surface, formations)
– Structural support against cave-in
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Rotary Drilled Well in Limestone
• Surface casing– From ground
surface through unconsolidated upper material
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Unconsolidated Aquifers
• Pump chamber casing– Casing
within which pump is set
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Consolidated Aquifer• Cementing
– Prevent entrance of poor quality water
– Protect casing against corrosion
– Stabilize formation
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Well in Confined, Consolidated Aquifer
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Placing the Pack
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Well Screen• Head loss through perforated well section
– Percentage of open area (minimum 15%)– Diameter depends on well yield and aquifer
thickness– Entrance velocities must be limited
• Vs = entrance velocity• Q = pumping rate• c = clogging cefficient• Ds = screen diameter
• Ls = screen length• P = Percent open area
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Entrance Velocity vs Conductivity
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Well Screens
• May or may not be required• Proper screen improves yield• Slot size
– Related to grain-size• Other considerations
– Mineral content of water, presence of bacteria, and strength requirements
– Excess convergence of flow
Groundwater and Wells, Driscoll, 1986
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Well Design, Completion and Development
• Gravel Pack– Installed between screen
and borehole wall– Allows larger screen slot
sizes – Reduces fine grained
sediment entering• Development
– Washing fines out of the aquifer near the well
– Cleaning the well with water
– Air-lifting, surging, pumping, or backwashing
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Well Development
• After completion, wells are developed to increase specific capacity and improve economic life.
• Remove finer materials from the formation.
• Pumping• Surging• Compressed air
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Pumps
• Shallow Wells– Hand-operated– Turbine– Centrifugal (shallow, high
volume)• Deep Wells– turbine, submersible
turbine submersible
Motor
Motor
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Spring Box
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Wellhead Protection
• Grout seal, concrete slab, and well seal for sanitary protection.
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Well Design, Completion and Development
• Well diameter– Dictated by size of pump– Affects cost of the well– Must ensure good
hydraulic efficiency• Well depth
– Complete to the bottom of the aquifer• More aquifer thickness
utilized• Higher specific capacity
(Q/s, discharge per unit of drawdown)
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Collector Well
Sonoma County Water Agency collector well along Russian River near Wholer Bridge. The water agency operates five similar wells on the Russian River. All use the Raney design with laterals extending beneath the river bed in a radial pattern from the main caisson. Each of these wells are capable of producing between 15 and 20 million gallons of water per day. The river water is naturally filtered as it moves through the river bed sediments to the collector wells.
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Well Diameter vs Pumping Rate(max 5 ft/sec in casing)
Well Casing Well Yield(in. ID) (gpm)
6 1008 175
10 30012 70014 100016 180020 300024 380030 6000
Groundwater and Wells, Driscoll, 1986
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Drawdown in a Well• Drawdown in a pumped
well consists of two components:
• Aquifer losses– Head losses that occur in
the aquifer where the flow is laminar
– Tme-dependent – Vary linearly with the
well discharge
• Well losses– Aquifer damage during
drilling and completion– Turbulent friction losses
adjacent to well, in the well and pipe
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Well Losses• Excess drawdown due to well
design, well construction, or the nature of the aquifer
Note UNITS!
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Specific Capacity
• Specific capacity = Q/sw
– Yield per unit of drawdown– gpm/ft, or m3/hr/m
• Drawdown in the well
• Specific capacity - linear function of Q
• Observing change in sw as Q is increased – select optimum pumping rate
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Specific Capacity Map
http://www.wrd.org/engineering/specific-capacity-well-1.php
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Step Drawdown Test• To evaluate well losses• Pump a well at a low rate
until drawdown stabilizes• Increase pumping rate • Pump until drawdown
stabilizes again• Repeat at least three times
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Step-Drawdown Test
Q (m3/day) S (m)
500 1
1000 2.6
2000 8.9
2500 14.0
2750 18.6
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Step Drawdown Test• Plot sw/Q vs Q• Fit straight line
• Slope = a1 = C
• Intercept = a0 = B
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Step-Drawdown Test (Example)Q (m3/day) S (m)
500 1.14
1000 2.66
1500 5.57
2000 8.82
2500 13.54
3000 18.79
3500 23.67 0 500 10001500200025003000350040000
0.001
0.002
0.003
0.004
0.005
0.006
0.007
0.008
f(x) = 1.59699319727891E-06 x + 0.00130680272108844
Well Discharge, Q (m3/day)
sw/Q
(day
/m2)
C = 1.6x10-6 day2/m5
= 3.32 min2/m5
Severe deterioration or clogging
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Losses: Formation, Well, Total
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Well Efficiency
• Specific capacity = Q/s – Relationship between drawdown and discharge of a well
• Describes productivity of aquifer and well• Specific capacity decreases with– Time – Increasing Q
• Well efficiency = ratio of aquifer loss to total loss
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Pumping System
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Summary• Well Drilling
– Augers– Cable Tool– Rotary– Mud
• Well Completion– Unconsolidated formations– Consolidated Formations– Well Screens– Gravel Packs
• Well Development– Well Drawdown– Well Losses– Specific Capacity– Step Drawdown Test– Well Efficiency