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Introduction
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There are two types of hydraulic connections available when choosing this type of groundwater model - unsaturated and saturated. The former The latter is the most complex of all the groundwater models.
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Notice that by default, evapotranspiration, low flow and bank storage are disabled. Right-click and choose Enable to configure the parameters associated with these items.
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Note: When using multiple rating curves, it is important that each curve has a unique start date to ensure that the model matches the current time-step with the relevant rating curve. The model gives a warning if a rating curve has the same start date. |
Under unsaturated conditions, the groundwater head value can not be larger than the current stream height. Groundwater head is always below the stream bed level under unsaturated conditions.
Figure 5. Groundwater, unsaturated
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To add a process to the current saturated connection model, enable the desired checkbox. Conversely, to remove a process, disable the corresponding checkbox. The eight processes are described next.
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Note: Removing a process may result in the loss of any information entered for that process. |
Low flow
A river may continuously lose water to, or gain water from the nearby aquifer; neutral cases are also a possibility (no head gradient with zero exchange). Consider a whole river-aquifer system that is at a steady-state (ie. recharge into the entire aquifer is equal to discharge from the aquifer to the river system), thus this exchange flux (gain or loss) would remain constant with time. It is given by:
Δ hxC
M
Where, Dh is the head difference, C is the hydraulic conductance of the river-aquifer interconnection (m2/day) and M is the thickness of river bed sediments (m).
Figure 5 shows the parameters that must be configured for low flow.
Figure 5. Link (Groundwater, saturated, Low flow)
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Figure 6. Link (Groundwater, saturated, bank storage, calculation)
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- Whether an overbank event has occurred;
- How much water is in any of the inundated floodplain areas;
- How much of this water is lost to evaporation; and
- How much water is returned to the stream (as a groundwater flux).
Figure 8. Link (Groundwater, saturated, overbank)
For each inundated floodplain area that you wish to model, an additional six parameters are required:
- Threshold - a (unique) height (in mAHD) that river stage height must exceed to increase the area’s water volume;
- Hydraulic conductivity - the hydraulic conductivity of the surface soil in the area;
- Bed thickness - the bed thickness (surface soil depth in meters) of the area;
- Orthogonal distance - the orthogonal distance (m) from the area centroid to the stream;
- Y distance - the distance from the area centroid to a line perpendicular to the stream through the upstream node (not currently used by the model but included for completeness); and
- A table of level, volume, area relationships for the area such that, in each successive row of the table, the level is greater than that in the previous row and all level values are greater than the threshold.
Pumping
Groundwater pumping is one of the most important processes that impacts the exchange flux between groundwater and surface water. Pumping-induced river depletion is defined as the reduction of river flow due to induced infiltration of stream water into the aquifer or the capture of aquifer discharge to the river. As the cone of depression progresses towards a nearby river, groundwater discharge to the river gradually reduces and when the cone of depression reached the river, groundwater discharge to the river ceases. River water eventually start infiltrating the aquifer contributing to groundwater pumping and the rate of groundwater level drop decreases. Surface water may even start to infiltrate into the aquifer thus marking the start of river depletion.
After a long period of pumping, the cone of depression takes its final shape (ie a steady-state is reached), and a portion, or in some cases, all of the pumping will be balanced by a reduction in, or reversal of flow, from the aquifer to the river. The proportion of pumping met by river depletion in the steady-state case will depend on various factors, including the proximity of the bore to the river compared to the distance between the bore and other stresses to the groundwater system (eg recharge, ET).
Source allows for two types of groundwater pumping:
- Pumping from an unconfined aquifer (Figure 9) with or without a no-flow boundary - This caters for pumps which tap directly into an aquifer (with or without a no-flow boundary) which is hydraulically connected to the stream. The pump is at a given distance from the stream, it switches on at some time, pumps at a constant rate for a period (the pumping period may occur prior to the simulation start time and the effects are still modelled) and then switches off; and
- Pumping from a semi-confined aquifer (Figure 10) - used to model pumps which tap into a semi-confined aquifer which is hydraulically connected to the stream. Again, the pump switches on at some time, pumps at a constant rate and switches off.
You could enter the parameters for each process, or import a .csv file containing this information.
Parameter definitions (Figures 9 and 11):
- Name - a unique text string representing the pump name or number;
- Start time - the day on which the pumping commenced;
- End time - last day of the pumping;
- Rate - Rate of pumping;
- Orthogonal distance - the orthogonal distance (m) from the area centroid to the stream;
- Y distance - the distance from the area centroid to a line perpendicular to the stream through the upstream node (not currently used by the model but included for completeness);
- River to no-flow boundary distance - Distance away from the river where effects will no longer be observed at the river.
Parameters definitions (Figure 10):
- Name - a unique text string representing the pump name or number;
- K* - non-dimensional variables used in the Hunt (2003) equation;
- λ - streambed resistance coefficient;
- ε - non-dimensional variables used in the Hunt (2003) equation;
- a - the orthogonal distance between the river and the pump;
- Start time - the day on which pumping commenced;
- End time - the last day of pumping;
- Pumping Rate - Rate of pumping;
- Orthogonal distance - the orthogonal distance (m) from the area centroid to the stream;
- K' - aquitard permeability;
- b - nominal stream width;
- σ - aquitard porosity;
- B' - aquitard saturated thickness;
- B'' - aquitard thickness beneath stream.
Figure 10. Link (Groundwater, saturated, semi-confined)
Irrigation recharge
Irrigation recharge (Figure 11) works in a similar way as an unconfined aquifer except that, when recharge occurs, the cone of depression is inverted to form a groundwater mound, recharging the aquifer. If a sufficient groundwater head is developed the recharge water returns to the stream via aquifer discharge.
Since it is modelled in the same manner as pumping from an unconfined aquifer, they share similar parameters (with the exception that Pumping Rate is called Recharge Rate) and the controls for entering these parameters are almost identical. As with pumping, you can add irrigation recharge locations either manually or from a file. In reality, irrigation recharge is a distributed source, but the Source software treats it as a point source.
Figure 11. Link (Groundwater, saturated, irrigation recharge)
Diffuse recharge
Unlike irrigation recharge which is applied at specific locations on the floodplain, diffuse recharge (Figure 12) is applied across the whole of the floodplain simultaneously. It infiltrates through the surface soil and recharges the aquifer, and if sufficient head difference is achieved, causes the aquifer to discharge water to the stream. The process model requires three shared aquifer parameters (Transmissivity, Specific yield and Floodplain width) and four process-specific unshared parameters:
- Name - a unique text string representing the pump name or number;
- Start time - the day on which the diffuse recharge commenced;
- End time - the last day of recharge; and
- Recharge rate.
Figure 12. Link (Groundwater, saturated, diffuse recharge)
Evapo-transpiration
The Evapotranspiration process model (Figure 13) calculates the amount of water which is lost from the aquifer by evapotranspiration (ie plant transpiration and/or bare soil evaporation). The model requires Floodplain width as a shared aquifer parameter and three process specific unshared parameters:
- Extinction Depth - the depth to water table at which ET no longer happens;
- Average Depth of Adjacent Groundwater Table - the average depth of the water table; and
- Gradient - the hydraulic gradient of the aquifer as a percentage.
Groundwater evapotranspiration is assumed to decrease with increasing depth to water table and the extinction depth is the depth at which groundwater evapotranspiration attains a value of zero.
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