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The Rehabilitation of Monitoring Wells Clogged by Calcite Precipitation and Drilling Mud

Authors :
David E. Kroening
Rex A. Hodges
Scott E. Brame
Van Price
Tom J. Temples
David S. Snipes
Source :
Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation. 16:114-123
Publication Year :
1996
Publisher :
Wiley, 1996.

Abstract

Based on aquifer performance tests, 13 out of 15 wells situated at the Mixed Waste Disposal (MWD) area located at the Savannah River site. South Carolina, exhibited high skin factors and low well efficiencies indicative of severely damaged wells. The use of damaged wells in aquifer testing can lead to inaccurate determinations of aquifer properties, and such wells are unusable in future remediation programs. Moreover, damaged wells can go dry during purging, thus compromising sample collection. Pump tests, chemical analyses, and biological investigations revealed that the poor well performance at MWD was attributable to calcite precipitation on the well screen and drilling mud in the filter pack. The calcite problem resulted from improper well installation, and the drilling mud in the filter pack was due to inadequate well development. Experimental rehabilitation procedures employed on two wells, MWD 5A and 1A, included acidification, swabbing, introduction of surfactants, and surging. Treatment of the wells substantially improved well yields, skin factors, and well efficiencies. Moreover, well rehabilitation was determined to be a reasonable alternative to drilling new wells at the MWD wellfield.

Details

ISSN :
10693629
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f07a03cdd16af0ff9744917527fbf489