Calculate the Apparent Velocity Using the Point Dilution Method
Professional Groundwater Flow Assessment Tool
0.00015 m/s
0.0079 m³
0.100 m²
2.50
Tracer Concentration Decay Curve
Visual representation of dilution over time based on current velocity.
| Distortion Factor (α) | Description | Apparent Velocity (m/day) |
|---|
What is the Point Dilution Method?
To calculate the apparent velocity using the point dilution method is a fundamental technique in hydrogeology used to determine the Darcy velocity of groundwater flow within a single borehole. Unlike pump tests that affect a large radius, the borehole dilution technique focuses on the local flow regime. By introducing a tracer (such as salt, dye, or radioactive isotopes) into a sealed section of a well and monitoring its concentration decay over time, engineers can calculate the apparent velocity using the point dilution method with high precision.
Who should use this? Environmental consultants, hydrologists, and civil engineers use this method to track contaminant plumes or assess aquifer characteristics. A common misconception is that the tracer disappears because of chemical reactions; in reality, it is the horizontal flow of fresh groundwater through the well screen that “dilutes” the tracer away.
Formula and Mathematical Explanation
The core mathematical principle rests on the conservation of mass. As water flows through the screened interval, it carries the tracer out while fresh water enters. To calculate the apparent velocity using the point dilution method, we use the following derivation:
va = – [V / (α · A · t)] · ln(C / C₀)
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| va | Apparent Velocity (Darcy Velocity) | m/s | 10⁻⁷ to 10⁻³ |
| V | Volume of the isolated test section | m³ | 0.001 – 0.1 |
| α | Hydrodynamic distortion factor | Dimensionless | 0.5 – 4.0 |
| A | Cross-sectional area of the borehole | m² | 0.01 – 0.5 |
| t | Elapsed time of measurement | Seconds | 600 – 86,400 |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: High Permeability Sandy Aquifer
A hydrologist needs to calculate the apparent velocity using the point dilution method in a 4-inch (0.1m) diameter well. They isolate a 1-meter section. Initial concentration (C₀) of NaCl is 500 mg/L. After 30 minutes (1800s), the concentration drops to 150 mg/L. Using an alpha factor of 2.0:
- Input C₀: 500 | C: 150 | t: 1800s | d: 0.1m | L: 1.0m
- Calculated va: Approximately 2.6 x 10⁻⁴ m/s.
- Interpretation: This suggests a very active groundwater flow, common in coarse sand layers.
Example 2: Monitoring Near a Landfill
To ensure containment, an engineer decides to calculate the apparent velocity using the point dilution method. Concentration drops from 100 units to 90 units over 4 hours (14,400s) in a 0.15m well. Alpha is set to 2.5 due to a thick gravel pack.
- Input C₀: 100 | C: 90 | t: 14400s | d: 0.15m | L: 1.0m
- Calculated va: Approximately 1.4 x 10⁻⁶ m/s.
- Interpretation: Very slow Darcy velocity, indicating low risk of rapid contaminant migration.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter Initial Concentration: Measure the tracer level immediately after mixing in the borehole.
- Enter Final Concentration: Provide the reading taken after a specific time interval.
- Set the Time: Input the duration in minutes between the two readings.
- Specify Well Geometry: Provide the diameter and the length of the isolated screened interval.
- Select α Factor: Choose the value that best matches your well construction (standard is 2.0).
- Read Results: The tool will instantly calculate the apparent velocity using the point dilution method in meters per second and meters per day.
Key Factors That Affect Results
- Borehole Distortion (α): This is the most critical uncertainty. If the gravel pack is much more permeable than the aquifer, flow converges into the well, leading to an overestimation of velocity if not corrected.
- Tracer Mixing: For an accurate result to calculate the apparent velocity using the point dilution method, the tracer must be perfectly mixed throughout the test volume.
- Vertical Flow: If vertical hydraulic gradients exist, the tracer might “sink” or “rise” out of the test section, creating a false dilution signal.
- Adsorption: Some tracers stick to the well screen or soil particles, which would mimic dilution and lead to an erroneously high velocity.
- Temperature: Changes in water density can induce convective mixing, interfering with the horizontal flow measurement.
- Well Development: A poorly developed well with a “skin” of fine silt will restrict flow, resulting in a calculated velocity lower than the actual aquifer flow.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
It provides a direct measurement of the Darcy velocity at a specific point, which is essential for calibrating groundwater models and estimating contaminant travel times.
Apparent velocity (va) is the Darcy velocity. To find the actual pore velocity (v), you must divide va by the effective porosity (ne) of the aquifer.
Ideally, use a conservative tracer like Bromide or Chloride that does not react with the aquifer matrix or well materials.
If the concentration remains constant, the groundwater velocity is either zero or below the detection limit of the point dilution method.
The screen’s open area percentage affects the α factor. Most calculations assume a screen that offers minimal resistance compared to the aquifer.
It depends on the flow rate. For calculating the apparent velocity using the point dilution method in slow aquifers, tests may need to run for 24 hours or more.
For a standard well without a gravel pack, α is often 2.0. With a very permeable filter pack, it can drop toward 0.5.
Not directly, but the hydrostatic pressure and local geological layer at that depth will determine the specific velocity you measure.
Related Tools and Internal Resources
- Groundwater Flow Basics: Learn the fundamentals of hydrogeology before you calculate the apparent velocity using the point dilution method.
- Tracer Test Methodology: A deep dive into selecting the right chemicals for field tests.
- Hydraulic Conductivity Calculator: Convert your velocity measurements into K-values using Darcy’s Law.
- Darcy Law Explained: The physics behind all groundwater movement.
- Aquifer Recharge Estimation: How point velocity fits into regional water balance.
- Borehole Geophysics Guide: Techniques to complement point dilution tests.