E3S Web of Conferences (Jan 2018)
Laboratory Scale Investigation of Dispersion Effects on Saltwater Movement due to Cutoff Wall Installation
Abstract
In the numerical investigation of saltwater transport in coastal aquifers, we need to correctly evaluate the hydrodynamic dispersion in the flow field. In this study, we focused on the role of dispersivity in the removal process of residual saltwater in a laboratory scale cutoff wall experiment. From a pulse-type fluorescent tracer injection experiment in a saturated porous media of glass beads with a mean diameter of 0.088 cm, the estimated longitudinal and transverse dispersivities were found to be 0.07 cm and 0.0025 cm, respectively. Numerical analysis of the saltwater intrusion and subsequent removal after cutoff wall installation using SEAWAT and the generated dispersivity ratio (αL/αT) of 28 reproduces well the measured salt concentration changes with time. Whereas, if a dispersivity ratio of 10 is used in the numerical simulation, transverse dispersion in the saltwater and freshwater mixing zone becomes large and the residual saltwater is removed faster than the laboratory experiment. Inversely, if 100 was used, the residual saltwater removal time took longer. The transverse dispersion is a key parameter in the mechanical dispersion of saltwater in the mixing zone after cutoff wall installation.