Abstract Studies have illustrated how Infinite Acting Radial Flow (IARF) can be used as an objective criterion than the u condition to evaluate the valid of applying the Cooper and… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Studies have illustrated how Infinite Acting Radial Flow (IARF) can be used as an objective criterion than the u condition to evaluate the valid of applying the Cooper and Jacob time-drawdown (1946) method. The Cooper and Jacob (1946) time-drawdown and distance-drawdown methods work on the same principle which incorporates the u condition. A similar study to assess the use of IARF as a criterion to determine the applicability of the Cooper and Jacob distance-drawdown (1946) method to analyse aquifer-pumping tests would be beneficial to groundwater practitioners. This study uses numerical groundwater flow modelling to assess and evaluate the application of the Cooper and Jacob (1946) distance-drawdown method to analyse multi-well aquifer pumping tests in ideal homogenous porous and isotropic confined aquifers under unsteady-state flow. Three multi-well aquifer-pumping tests are simulated in ideal one-layer homogeneous and isotropic confined aquifer models using Processing MODFLOW and the data is analysed by the Cooper and Jacob (1946) distance-drawdown method. The results shows that the Cooper and Jacob (1946) distance-drawdown method can only estimate correct transmissivity and storativity parameters when it is applied to observation data after IRAF. The u values calculated for the analysis vary over a wider range and do not satisfy all the literature prescribed u values. The study demonstrates and recommends how IRAF should be used as an objective criterion to determine the validity of applying the Cooper and Jacob (1946) distance-drawdown method.
               
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