RI 8479 Computer Modeling of Fluid Flow During Production and Environmental Restoration Phases of In Situ Uranium Leaching

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Robert D. Schmidt
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
74
File Size:
3270 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1980

Abstract

This Bureau of Mines report describes the development and application of a computer model for simulating the hydrological activity associated with in situ leaching. The model is intended to provide uranium resource developers with a description of the flow behavior of leachants and ground water during the development, production, and restoration phases of a leaching operation involving an arbitrary pattern of injection and recovery wells. Different aquifer environments are modeled, using a closed-form solution to the partial differential equation that describes three-dimensional changes in piezometric head as a result of pumping from leachant injection and recovery wells. The computer program can model a maximum of, 50 arbitarily located wells. Numerical techniques involving difference quotients and Taylor expansions about time points are used to derive time, velocity, areal sweep, and fluid volume parameters associated with leaching hydraulics. These parameters are output by the program in graphic and tabular formats. Other numeric methods insure that the program running time is minimized without significantly affect-ing the accuracy of results.
Citation

APA: Robert D. Schmidt  (1980)  RI 8479 Computer Modeling of Fluid Flow During Production and Environmental Restoration Phases of In Situ Uranium Leaching

MLA: Robert D. Schmidt RI 8479 Computer Modeling of Fluid Flow During Production and Environmental Restoration Phases of In Situ Uranium Leaching. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1980.

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