Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6409821 | Journal of Hydrology | 2015 | 10 Pages |
â¢The remediation of energetically overexploited urban aquifer is modeled.â¢The remediation efficiency of recharging surface water in cold seasons is evaluated.â¢Proposed remediation measures may have a duration of decades.â¢Methods for thermal management of overexploited urban aquifers are presented.
SummaryShallow aquifers have an important role in reducing greenhouse gases through helping manage the temperature of urban environments. Nevertheless, the uncontrolled rapid use of shallow groundwater resources to heat or cool urban environments can cause thermal pollution that will limit the long term sustainability of the resource. Therefore, there is a need for appropriate mitigation/remediation strategies capable of recovering energetically overexploited aquifers. In this work, a novel remediation strategy based on surface water recharge into aquifers is presented. To evaluate the capabilities of such measures for effective remediation, this strategy is optimized for a management problem raised in the overheated “Urban Alluvial Aquifer of Zaragoza” (Spain). The application of a transient groundwater flow and heat transport model under 512 different mitigation scenarios has enabled to quantify and discuss the magnitude of the remediation effect as a respond to injection rates of surface water, seasonal schedule of the injection and location of injection. The quantification of the relationship between these variables together with the evaluation of the amount of surface water injected per year in each scenario proposed have provided a better understanding of the system processes and an optimal management alternative. This work also makes awareness of the magnitude of the remediation procedure which is in an order of magnitude of tenths of years.