Drywell infiltration and hydraulic properties in heterogeneous soil profiles.

J Hydrol (Amst)

Systems Exposure Division, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Office of Research and Development, US Environmental Protection Agency, Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Drywells are being utilized more frequently for stormwater management and aquifer recharge, yet the effects of subsurface soil variability on their efficiency have not been extensively studied.
  • Numerical experiments using HYDRUS software revealed that having high permeability layers at the bottom of drywells significantly boosts infiltration rates, especially with larger horizontal extents of these layers.
  • It was also found that accurately determining soil properties from drywell performance is feasible for simple soil structures, but challenging for complex, realistic soil heterogeneities, suggesting the replacement of heterogeneous profiles with equivalent homogeneous ones for analysis.

Article Abstract

Drywells are increasingly used to capture stormwater runoff for surface infiltration and aquifer recharge, but little research has examined the role of ubiquitous subsurface heterogeneity in hydraulic properties on drywell performance. Numerical experiments were therefore conducted using the HYDRUS (2D/3D) software to systematically study the influence of subsurface heterogeneity on drywell infiltration. Subsurface heterogeneity was described deterministically by defining soil layers or lenses, or by generating stochastic realizations of soil hydraulic properties with selected variance () and horizontal () and vertical () correlation lengths. The infiltration rate increased when a high permeability layer/lens was located at the bottom of the drywell, and had larger vertical and especially horizontal dimensions. Furthermore, the average cumulative infiltration () for 100 stochastic realizations of a given subsurface heterogeneity increased with and , but decreased with . This indicates that the presence of many highly permeable, laterally extending lenses provides a larger surface area for enhanced infiltration than the presence of isolated, highly permeable lenses. The ability to inversely determine soil hydraulic properties from numerical drywell infiltration results was also investigated. The hydraulic properties and the lateral extension of a highly permeable lens could be accurately determined for certain idealized situations (e.g., simple layered profiles) using constant head tests. However, variability in soil hydraulic properties could not be accurately determined for systems that exhibited more realistic stochastic heterogeneity. In this case, the heterogeneous profile could be replaced with an equivalent homogeneous profile and values of an effective isotropic saturated conductivity (Ks) and the shape parameter in the soil water retention function (α) could be inversely determined. The average value of Ks for 100 stochastic realizations showed a similar dependency to on , , and Whereas, the average value of α had large confidence interval for soil heterogeneity parameters and played a secondary role in drywell infiltration. This research provides valuable insight on the selection of site, design, installation, and long-term performance of a drywell.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6688636PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2018.12.073DOI Listing

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