Hello,
To follow up on a previous post regarding a vertical model vs. horizontal model for modeling seawater intrusion (thank you Pete and Peter for your input): I am pursuing a simplified horizontal model but having trouble making it behave predictably. I have a simple 4 layer model with a sloped seawater boundary represented by the top first slice and with the slices below following the upper sea-slope with a minimum distance below in order to abide by the FEFLOW rule of having each layer extend through the entire model boundary. My problem is that even when I leave [i]all layers with default material property parameters[/i], their landward saltwater migration seems to be quite segmented for each layer as shown in the image attached. Also there is not much of a seawater intrusion toe with more migration on the lower elevations. The run seems to take quite a long time (12hrs for a 6.5 day run) so maybe this migration stepping (and toe behavior) will even out after a longer runtime but I am suspicious.
My questions are as follows:
1. Are there certain material properties that need to be set for these very thin stacked layer sections that would promote a more uniform mass migration? I will eventually want migration stepping behavior when I add aquitards but is is not intuitive when the layers have the same material properties.
2. Should I only put seawater boundary conditions (saltwater head: 0m, mass concentration: 35000mg/L, min mass flow constraint: 0g/d) on the first slice's nodes or on the slices below where the thin layer sections are very close to offshore?
3. My model is very simple structurally yet seems to have a very long runtime. Is this most likely from the thinly layered sections?
In case there is anyone interested in helping I have attached the model file and would love if anyone had the time to look at it to see if there are any egregious oversights.
Thank you very much!