Frontiers in Earth Science (Feb 2021)

Recovering the Effects of Subgrid Heterogeneity in Simulations of Radionuclide Transport Through Fractured Media

  • Thomas Williams,
  • Jordi Sanglas,
  • Paolo Trinchero,
  • Guanqun Gai,
  • Scott L. Painter,
  • Jan-Olof Selroos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2020.586247
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Groundwater flow and contaminant transport through fractured media can be simulated using Discrete Fracture Network (DFN) models which provide a natural description of structural heterogeneity. However, this approach is computationally expensive, with the large number of intersecting fractures necessitated by many real-world applications requiring modeling simplifications to be made for calculations to be tractable. Upscaling methods commonly used for this purpose can result in some loss of local-scale variability in the groundwater flow velocity field, resulting in underestimation of particle travel times, transport resistance and retention in transport calculations. In this paper, a transport downscaling algorithm to recover the transport effects of heterogeneity is tested on a synthetic Brittle Fault Zone model, motivated by the problem of large safety assessment calculations for geological repositories of spent nuclear fuel. We show that the variability in the local-scale velocity field which is lost by upscaling can be recovered by sampling from a library of DFN transport paths, accurately reproducing DFN transport statistic distributions and radionuclide breakthrough curves in an upscaled model.

Keywords