{"title":"Well performance in relation to design, construction and wellfield operation: a case study from the fossil Ram sandstone aquifer in Southern Jordan","authors":"A. Charalambous, B.R. Burnet","doi":"10.1144/qjegh2023-039","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n The Dubaydib wellfield in Southern Jordan comprises 55 wells up to 600 m in depth, and exploits the fossil Ram sandstone aquifer. It has an average output of 100 MCM a\n -1\n and well yields of 51 - 80 l s\n -1\n . Drilling fluid has affected well performance with lowest specific capacities of 1.56 l s\n -1\n m\n -1\n in bentonite drilled wells, highest ( 5.46 l s\n -1\n m\n -1\n ) in water drilled open hole constructions and in the middle range ( 3.07 l s\n -1\n m\n -1\n ) in polymer drilled wells. Well loss coefficients and skin effect values confirm these results. The productivity of bentonite drilled wells has not improved during production indicating that the damage has been irreversible. Well efficiency evaluations have been found to be sensitive to the method of calculation and not to provide a reliable measure of productivity. During the course of wellfield operation (2013-2021) specific capacities declined from an all well average of 3.78 to 3.13 l s\n -1\n m\n -1\n or c.17 %. The decline reflects the deepening of groundwater levels as a result of aquifer response rather than well deterioration. As groundwater extraction is from storage, specific capacities will continue to fall, tentative estimates suggesting to 2.56 l s\n -1\n m\n -1 \n after 25 years and 2.16 l s\n -1\n m\n -1\n after 50 years.\n","PeriodicalId":20937,"journal":{"name":"Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1144/qjegh2023-039","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, GEOLOGICAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Dubaydib wellfield in Southern Jordan comprises 55 wells up to 600 m in depth, and exploits the fossil Ram sandstone aquifer. It has an average output of 100 MCM a
-1
and well yields of 51 - 80 l s
-1
. Drilling fluid has affected well performance with lowest specific capacities of 1.56 l s
-1
m
-1
in bentonite drilled wells, highest ( 5.46 l s
-1
m
-1
) in water drilled open hole constructions and in the middle range ( 3.07 l s
-1
m
-1
) in polymer drilled wells. Well loss coefficients and skin effect values confirm these results. The productivity of bentonite drilled wells has not improved during production indicating that the damage has been irreversible. Well efficiency evaluations have been found to be sensitive to the method of calculation and not to provide a reliable measure of productivity. During the course of wellfield operation (2013-2021) specific capacities declined from an all well average of 3.78 to 3.13 l s
-1
m
-1
or c.17 %. The decline reflects the deepening of groundwater levels as a result of aquifer response rather than well deterioration. As groundwater extraction is from storage, specific capacities will continue to fall, tentative estimates suggesting to 2.56 l s
-1
m
-1
after 25 years and 2.16 l s
-1
m
-1
after 50 years.
位于约旦南部的Dubaydib井田由55口井组成,井深达600米,主要开采拉姆砂岩含水层。它的平均产量为100 MCM a -1,井产量为51 - 80 l s -1。钻井液影响井的性能,膨润土井的比容最小,为1.56 ls -1 m -1,水钻裸眼井的比容最大,为5.46 ls -1 m -1,聚合物井的比容中等,为3.07 ls -1 m -1。井损系数和集肤效应值证实了这些结果。在生产过程中,膨润土钻井的产能并没有得到提高,说明这种损害是不可逆的。人们发现,井效评价对计算方法很敏感,不能提供可靠的产能衡量标准。在井场运行过程中(2013-2021年),比容量从所有井的平均3.78升/立方米/立方米下降到3.13升/立方米/立方米,降幅为17%。这种下降反映了由于含水层响应而导致的地下水位加深,而不是水井恶化。由于地下水是从储存中提取的,具体容量将继续下降,初步估计25年后为2.56升/ 1立方米/ 1,50年后为2.16升/ 1立方米/ 1。
期刊介绍:
Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology is owned by the Geological Society of London and published by the Geological Society Publishing House.
Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology & Hydrogeology (QJEGH) is an established peer reviewed international journal featuring papers on geology as applied to civil engineering mining practice and water resources. Papers are invited from, and about, all areas of the world on engineering geology and hydrogeology topics. This includes but is not limited to: applied geophysics, engineering geomorphology, environmental geology, hydrogeology, groundwater quality, ground source heat, contaminated land, waste management, land use planning, geotechnics, rock mechanics, geomaterials and geological hazards.
The journal publishes the prestigious Glossop and Ineson lectures, research papers, case studies, review articles, technical notes, photographic features, thematic sets, discussion papers, editorial opinion and book reviews.