Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Subsurface storage of freshwater in South Florida; a digital analysis of recoverability

January 1, 1983

As part of a feasibility study of cyclic freshwater injection, digital models were implemented to analyze the relation of recovery efficiency to various hydrogeologic conditions which could prevail in brackish aquifers and to various management regimes. The analyses implemented an approach in which the control for sensitivity testing was a hypothetical aquifer representative of potential injection zones in south Florida, and parameter variations in sensitivity tests represented possible variations in aquifer conditions in the area. The permeability of the aquifer determined whether buoyancy stratification could reduce recovery efficiency. The range of permeability leading to buoyancy stratification became lower as resident fluid salinity increased. Thus, recovery efficiency was optimized by both low permeability and low resident fluid density. High levels of simulated hydrodynamic dispersion led to the lowest estimates of recovery efficiency. Advection by regional flow within the artesian injection zone could significantly affect recovery efficiency, depending upon the storage period, the volume injected, and site-specific hydraulic characteristics. Recovery efficiency was unrelated to the rate of injection or withdrawal or to the degree of penetration of permeable layers, and improved with successive cycles of injection and recovery. (USGS)

Publication Year 1983
Title Subsurface storage of freshwater in South Florida; a digital analysis of recoverability
DOI 10.3133/ofr83536
Authors Michael L. Merritt
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Open-File Report
Series Number 83-536
Index ID ofr83536
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse