You’re offline. This is a read only version of the page.
Please wait...
×
Error
X
Toggle navigation
Download Center
Download Center
MIKE 2025
Scientific Publications
Knowledge Base
Contact Support
Contact Sales
Contact Sales
Service and Maintenance Agreements
All
All
Forums
Knowledge Articles
Search Filter
All
Forums
Knowledge Articles
Search all support and community content
Sign in
DHI Group
MIKE Powered by DHI
DHI Training Portal
Metocean Data Portal
Bathymetrics Data Portal
MIKE Cloud Admin
Home
Access Denied
FEFLOW
Drawdown in Multilayer well
Drawdown in Multilayer well
Posted
Thu, 19 Jun 2014 17:48:45 GMT
by
kmcoulib
I'm calibrating to few pumping tests using a multilayer well and realized that the drawdown in the pumping well seems always under-estimated.
So I created a simple one layer model with a well in the middle. I made sure my elements fit the "ideal element size" by moving the nodes and discretizing as needed. I compared the results to the theis solution and FEFLOW is under-estimating the drawdown in the pumping well by as much as 20 m!
Am I missing something?
Thanks.
Posted
Fri, 20 Jun 2014 06:51:11 GMT
by
Carlos Andres Rivera Villarreyes
Global Product Specialist - FEFLOW
Hi,
FEFLOW has been tested with several benchmark exercises. One of them is the Theis' solution. You may take a look on the section 9.8.1 "[i][b]Transient Flow to a Well in a Confined and Unconfined Aquifer[/b][/i]" in the FEFLOW Book (pages 429-435).
Regards,
Carlos
Posted
Fri, 20 Jun 2014 12:58:53 GMT
by
kmcoulib
Thanks for your quick reply,
I'm not questioning the accuracy or correctness of FEFLOW. I'm rather checking if I missed something. I know the mesh around the well is a factor. From a previous response on this Forum too fine or too coarse gives different drawdown results at the well. But using the "ideal element size" should yield realistic results. This is what I was trying to establish. Does the benchmark you reference address the ideal element size in a multilayer well? Or is it the axisymmetric example from the white papers? Also does the book come with a FEFLOW license or does it need to be purchased separately?
Thanks
Posted
Tue, 24 Jun 2014 02:40:12 GMT
by
Goktug Evin
have you considered well losses?How is your match for the obs well data?
Goktug
Posted
Tue, 24 Jun 2014 03:57:54 GMT
by
kmcoulib
Hi Goktug,
Thanks for your suggestion. I'm looking into that. But as I mentioned I created a simple theoretical model using the multilayer well and compared it to the Theis solution, so no well loss in this case.
Posted
Tue, 24 Jun 2014 06:16:29 GMT
by
Julia Mayer
Have you made sure that all the assumptions for Theis' solution to be valid are met, e.g., confined conditions, infinite lateral extent, fully penetrating well etc.?
Regards,
Julia
You must be signed in to post in this forum.