Limitations of Monitoring Wells for the Detection and Quantification of Petroleum Products in Soils and Aquifers
- 1 March 1989
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Ground Water Monitoring & Remediation
- Vol. 9 (2) , 90-99
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1745-6592.1989.tb01144.x
Abstract
Theoretical analysis and laboratory column experiments were carried out to investigate the conditions required for petroleum products (oil) to flow into a well installed through a sandy porous medium contaminated with the oil. The results indicated that oil would flow into a well only after a layer of “free oil” is formed in the adjacent porous medium. Because significant quantities of oil could be stored in the porous medium under the influence of capillary suction prior to the formation of the zone of free oil, the presence of oil in a well would indicate an advanced stage of oil contamination of the subsurface. While monitoring wells could be used to delineate the extent of the free‐oil plume and the plume of dissolved petroleum constituents, they are not useful for delineating the extent of capillary held oil.The experimental results also indicated that the ratio of the oil‐layer thickness in the well to that in the porous medium is not a constant as is sometimes assumed in practice. Further, estimates of the oil thickness in the medium based on the oil thickness in wells and on capillary properties measured in the laboratory were sensitive to the values of the parameters used in these estimates. The measured thickness of the oil layer in a monitoring well alone may not yield reliable estimates of the amount of oil in the subsurface, and assuming that the oil‐thickness ratio is a constant can lead to inadequate site assessments and inappropriate remedial plans.Keywords
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