• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Effect of Filter Designs on Hydraulic Properties and Well Efficiency
  • Contributor: Kim, Byung‐Woo
  • Published: Wiley, 2014
  • Published in: Groundwater, 52 (2014) S1, Seite 175-185
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1111/gwat.12166
  • ISSN: 0017-467X; 1745-6584
  • Keywords: Computers in Earth Sciences ; Water Science and Technology
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: AbstractTo analyze the effect of filter pack arrangement on the hydraulic properties and the well efficiency of a well design, a step drawdown was conducted in a sand‐filled tank model. Prior to the test, a single filter pack (SFP), granule only, and two dual filter packs (DFPs), type A (granule‐pebble) and type B (pebble‐granule), were designed to surround the well screen. The hydraulic properties and well efficiencies related to the filter packs were evaluated using the Hazen's, Eden‐Hazel's, Jacob's, and Labadie‐Helweg's methods. The results showed that the hydraulic properties and well efficiency of the DFPs were higher than those of a SFP, and the clogging effect and wellhead loss related to the aquifer material were the lowest owing to the grain size and the arrangement of the filter pack. The hydraulic conductivity of the DFPs types A and B was about 1.41 and 6.43 times that of a SFP, respectively. In addition, the well efficiency of the DFPs types A and B was about 1.38 and 1.60 times that of the SFP, respectively. In this study, hydraulic property and well efficiency changes were observed according to the variety of the filter pack used. The results differed from the predictions of previous studies on the grain‐size ratio. Proper pack‐aquifer ratios and filter pack arrangements are primary factors in the construction of efficient water wells, as is the grain ratio, intrinsic permeability (k), and hydraulic conductivity (K) between the grains of the filter packs and the grains of the aquifer.