| Literature DB >> 26938497 |
Takeshi Saito1, Shoichiro Hamamoto2, Takashi Ueki3, Satoshi Ohkubo3, Per Moldrup4, Ken Kawamoto3, Toshiko Komatsu3.
Abstract
Global warming and urbanization together with development of subsurface infrastructures (e.g. subways, shopping complexes, sewage systems, and Ground Source Heat Pump (GSHP) systems) will likely cause a rapid increase in the temperature of relatively shallow groundwater reservoirs (subsurface thermal pollution). However, potential effects of a subsurface temperature change on groundwater quality due to changed physical, chemical, and microbial processes have received little attention. We therefore investigated changes in 34 groundwater quality parameters during a 13-month enhanced-heating period, followed by 14 months of natural or enhanced cooling in a confined marine aquifer at around 17 m depth on the Saitama University campus, Japan. A full-scale GSHP test facility consisting of a 50 m deep U-tube for circulating the heat-carrying fluid and four monitoring wells at 1, 2, 5, and 10 m from the U-tube were installed, and groundwater quality was monitored every 1-2 weeks. Rapid changes in the groundwater level in the area, especially during the summer, prevented accurate analyses of temperature effects using a single-well time series. Instead, Dual-Well Analysis (DWA) was applied, comparing variations in subsurface temperature and groundwater chemical concentrations between the thermally-disturbed well and a non-affected reference well. Using the 1 m distant well (temperature increase up to 7 °C) and the 10 m distant well (non-temperature-affected), the DWA showed an approximately linear relationships for eight components (B, Si, Li, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), Mg(2+), NH4(+), Na(+), and K(+)) during the combined 27 months of heating and cooling, suggesting changes in concentration between 4% and 31% for a temperature change of 7 °C.Entities:
Keywords: Confined marine aquifer; Dual-Well Analysis (DWA); Ground Source Heat Pump (GSHP) systems; Groundwater quality; Long-term heating and cooling; Subsurface thermal pollution
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26938497 DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2016.01.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Water Res ISSN: 0043-1354 Impact factor: 11.236