(Z&B) Steps in Transport Modeling Calibration step (calibrate flow model & transport model) Adjust parameter values.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
– Forensic Geology The Woburn Toxics Case A Civil Action.
Advertisements

Groundwater Modeling - 1
Getahun Wendmkun Adane March 13,2014 Groundwater Modeling and Optimization of Irrigation Water Use Efficiency to sustain Irrigation in Kobo Valley, Ethiopia.
Groundwater Flow Model of the Southern Willamette Valley Groundwater Management Area Jeremy Craner and Roy Haggerty Department of Geosciences.
Features of POLLUSOL Flow model Flow model Homogeneous, Isotropic, Heterogeneous and Anisotropic medium Homogeneous, Isotropic, Heterogeneous and Anisotropic.
Ground-Water Flow and Solute Transport for the PHAST Simulator Ken Kipp and David Parkhurst.
Characterization and Modeling of the Cape Cod Aquifer EE&S 816 James K. Henderson May 5, 2005.
Southwest Kansas Groundwater Management District #3 Model Kansas Water Office Contract A Kansas Water Plan Project Progress Report March 29, 2010.
Final Project I. Calibration II.Drawdown Prediction III.Particle Tracking IV.Presentation of Results.
General form of the ADE: sink/source term Chemical sink/source term.
Schedule April 22, 24: Particle tracking and Profile Models (PS6). Work on Part III of Final Project. April 24: 30 min in-class, closed book quiz. April.
Problem Set 2 is based on a problem in the MT3D manual; also discussed in Z&B, p D steady state flow in a confined aquifer We want to predict.
Source Terms Constant Concentration Injection Well Recharge May be introduced at the boundary or in the interior of the model.
Subsurface Hydrology Unsaturated Zone Hydrology Groundwater Hydrology (Hydrogeology )
Today’s Lecture: Grid design/boundary conditions and parameter selection. Thursday’s Lecture: Uncertainty analysis and Model Validation.
Uncertainty analysis and Model Validation.
Interdisciplinary Modeling of Aquatic Ecosystems Curriculum Development Workshop July 18, 2005 Groundwater Flow and Transport Modeling Greg Pohll Division.
The Calibration Process
Advection-Dispersion Equation (ADE) Assumptions 1.Equivalent porous medium (epm) (i.e., a medium with connected pore space or a densely fractured medium.
Application of Stage IV Precipitation Data to Estimate Spatially Variable Recharge for a Groundwater Flow Model Heather Moser Mentor: Dr. William Simpkins.
BIOPLUME II Introduction to Solution Methods and Model Mechanics.
Quantify prediction uncertainty (Book, p ) Prediction standard deviations (Book, p. 180): A measure of prediction uncertainty Calculated by translating.
Uses of Modeling A model is designed to represent reality in such a way that the modeler can do one of several things: –Quickly estimate certain aspects.
Problem Set 2 is based on a problem in the MT3D manual; also discussed in Z&B, p D steady state flow in a confined aquifer We want to predict.
Hydrologic Modeling: Verification, Validation, Calibration, and Sensitivity Analysis Fritz R. Fiedler, P.E., Ph.D.
IV. Sensitivity Analysis for Initial Model 1. Sensitivities and how are they calculated 2. Fit-independent sensitivity-analysis statistics 3. Scaled sensitivities.
Uncertainty Analysis and Model “Validation” or Confidence Building.
III. Ground-Water Management Problem Used for the Exercises.
Characterization of the Mammoth Cave aquifer Dr Steve Worthington Worthington Groundwater.
(Zheng and Bennett) Steps in Transport Modeling Calibration step (calibrate flow model & transport model) Adjust parameter values Traditional approach.
Understanding Ground Water Modeling Gary Johnson Donna Cosgrove Idaho Water Resources Research Institute University of Idaho Idaho Falls.
Hierarchical Modeling Linking to Science-Support Models EXAMPLE Hierarchical Modeling Linking to Science-Support Models Groundwater Modeling System RT3D.
Grid design/boundary conditions and parameter selection USGS publication (on course website): Guidelines for Evaluating Ground-Water Flow Models Scientific.
Modflow, GWVistas MODular three-dimensional finite- difference ground-water FLOW model
VIII: Methods for Evaluating Model Predictions 1. Define predictive quantity and calculate sensitivities and standard deviations (Ex8.1a) 2. Assess data.
A More Accurate and Powerful Tool for Managing Groundwater Resources and Predicting Land Subsidence: an application to Las Vegas Valley Zhang, Meijing.
Naples, Florida, June Tidal Effects on Transient Dispersion of Simulated Contaminant Concentrations in Coastal Aquifers Ivana La Licata Christian.
Calibration Guidelines 1. Start simple, add complexity carefully 2. Use a broad range of information 3. Be well-posed & be comprehensive 4. Include diverse.
Outline Numerical implementation Diagnosis of difficulties
19 Basics of Mass Transport
Working With Simple Models to Predict Contaminant Migration Matt Small U.S. EPA, Region 9, Underground Storage Tanks Program Office.
Source Terms Constant Concentration Injection Well Recharge May be introduced at the boundary or in the interior of the model.
Final Project I. Calibration Drawdown Prediction Particle Tracking
Types of Boundary Conditions 1.Specified head (including constant head) h = f (x,y,z,t) 2.Specified flux (including no flow)  h/  l = -q l /K l 3.Head-dependent.
Calibration & Sensitivity Analysis. Head measured in an observation well is known as a target. Baseflow measurements or other fluxes (e.g., ET) are also.
(Z&B) Steps in Transport Modeling Calibration step (calibrate flow & transport model) Adjust parameter values Design conceptual model Assess uncertainty.
Steady-State and Transient Models of Groundwater Flow and Advective Transport, Eastern Snake River Plain Aquifer, INL and Vicinity, Idaho Jason C. Fisher,
Transient Simulations require: Initial Conditions Storage Coefficient Time step.
IX. Transient Forward Modeling. Ground-Water Management Issues Recall the ground-water management issues for the simple flow system considered in the.
Metropolitan Council Regional Groundwater Flow Modeling Twin Cities Metropolitan Area Water Supply: March 11, 2008 Lanya Ross Senior Environmental Scientist.
Chitsan Lin, Sheng-Yu Chen Department of Marine Environmental Engineering, National Kaohsiung Marine University, Kaohsiung 81157, Taiwan / 05 / 25.
Objective: conceptual model definition and steady state simulation of groundwater flow.
A Brief Introduction to Groundwater Modeling
Building Transient MODFLOW Models
Ground Water Modeling Concepts
Modeling ASR Hydraulics and Plume Geometry
The Calibration Process
Uncertainty and Non-uniqueness
Chapter 6 Calibration and Application Process
Science in the Courtroom
Uses of Modeling A model is designed to represent reality in such a way that the modeler can do one of several things: Quickly estimate certain aspects.
Advection-Dispersion Equation (ADE)
Remediation of a Leaking Landfill Site
Principles and Applications of Backward-in-Time Modeling of Contaminants in the Environment Roseanna M. Neupauer Department of Civil, Environmental, and.
Dewatering Solutions using MODFLOW
Transport Modeling in Groundwater
Problem Set #3 – Part 3 - Remediation
Transport Modeling in Groundwater
2New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
Characterization of the Mammoth Cave aquifer
Presentation transcript:

(Z&B) Steps in Transport Modeling Calibration step (calibrate flow model & transport model) Adjust parameter values

Input Parameters for Transport Simulation Flow Transport hydraulic conductivity (K x, K y K z ) storage coefficient (S s, S, S y ) porosity (  ) dispersivity (  L,  TH,  TV ) retardation factor or distribution coefficient 1 st order decay coefficient or half life recharge rate pumping rates source term (mass flux) All of these parameters potentially could be estimated during calibration. That is, they are potentially calibration parameters.

Comparison of measured and simulated concentrations

A GWV calibration plot Observed value Model Value Perfect match

Average calibration errors (residuals) are reported as: Mean Absolute Error (MAE) = 1/N   calculated i – observed i  Root Mean Squared Error (RMS) =  1/N  (calculated i – observed i ) 2  ½ Sum of squared residuals =  (calculated i – observed i ) 2

Example listing of residuals in head targets in GWV

Calibration of a flow model is generally straightforward: Match model results to an observed steady state flow field If possible, verify with a transient calibration Calibration to flow is non-unique. Calibration of a transport model is more difficult: There are more potential calibration parameters There is greater potential for numerical error in the solution The measured concentration data needed for calibration may be sparse or non-existent Transport calibrations are non-unique.

Borden Plume Simulated: double-peaked source concentration (best calibration) Simulated: smooth source concentration (best calibration) Z&B, Ch. 14 Calibration is non-unique. Two sets of parameter values give equally good matches to the observed plume.

“Trial and error” method of calibration Assumed source input function R=1 R=3 R=6 observed

Modeling done by Maura Metheny for the PhD under the direction of Prof. Scott Bair, Ohio State University Case Study: Woburn, Massachusetts TCE (Trichloroethene)

Common organic contaminants Source: EPA circular

Spitz and Moreno (1996) fraction of organic carbon

Spitz and Moreno ( 1996)

01000 feet TCE in 1985 W.R. Grace Beatrice Foods Woburn Site Municipal Wells G & H Aberjona River Geology: buried river valley of glacial outwash and ice contact deposits overlying fractured bedrock The trial took place in Did TCE reach the wells before May 1979? Wells G&H operated from October May 1979

MODFLOW, MT3D, and GWV 6 layers, 93 rows, 107 columns (30,111 active cells) Woburn Model: Design The transport model typically took two to three days to run on a 1.8 gigahertz PC with 1024K MB RAM. Wells operated from October May 1979 Simulation run from Jan to Dec using 55 stress periods (to account for changes in pumping and recharge owing to changes in precipitation and land use) Five sources of TCE were included in the model: New England Plastics Wildwood Conservation Trust (Riley Tannery/Beatrice Foods) Olympia Nominee Trust (Hemingway Trucking) UniFirst W.R. Grace (Cryovac)

(Z&B) Steps in Transport Modeling Calibration step (calibrate flow model & transport model) Adjust parameter values

Calibration of a flow model is generally straightforward: Match model results to an observed steady state flow field If possible, verify with a transient calibration Calibration to flow is non-unique. Calibration of a transport model is more difficult: There are more potential calibration parameters There is greater potential for numerical error in the solution The measured concentration data needed for calibration may be sparse or non-existent Transport calibrations are non-unique. Calibration Targets: concentrations Calibration Targets: Heads and fluxes

Source term input function From Zheng and Bennett Used as a calibration parameter in the Woburn model Other possible calibration parameters include: K, recharge, boundary conditions dispersivities chemical reaction terms

Flow model (included heterogeneity in K, S and  ) Water levels Streamflow measurements Groundwater velocities from helium/tritium groundwater ages It cannot be determined which, if any, of the plausible scenarios actually represents what occurred in the groundwater flow system during this period, even though each of the plausible scenarios closely reproduces measured values of TCE. Woburn Model: Calibration Transport Model (included retardation) The animation represents one of several equally plausible simulations of TCE transport based on estimates of source locations, source concentrations, release times, and retardation. The group of plausible scenarios was developed because the exact nature of the TCE sources is not precisely known. A trial and error calibration

Automated Calibration From Zheng and Bennett Codes: UCODE, PEST, MODFLOWP Case Study

From Zheng and Bennett source term Sum of squared residuals =  (calculated i – observed i ) 2 Transport data are useful in calibrating a flow model recharge

Comparison of observed vs. simulated concentrations at 3 wells for the 10 parameter simulation. From Zheng and Bennett

Sensitivity Coefficients p. 343, Z&B Sensitivity Analysis

Example of a sensitivity analysis of a flow model From Zheng and Bennett

Normalized sensitivity coefficient of travel time with respect to hydraulic conductivity

TMR (telescopic mesh refinement) From Zheng and Bennett TMR is used to cut out and define boundary conditions around a local area within a regional flow model.

GWV option for Telescopic Mesh Refinement (TMR)

Multiple Species – MT3DMS RT3D