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Small-scale brine inflow experiments: Data report through June 6, 1991

Finley, S.J.

Seventeen small-scale brine inflow experiment boreholes have been and are currently being monitored for brine accumulation. All of the boreholes were drilled from underground excavations at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) near Carlsbad, NM. Experiments are ongoing in Room D, Room L4, and the Q access drift in the WIPP underground. The boreholes range from approximately 5 to 90 cm in diameter and from 3 to 6 m in length. The objective of these experiments is to provide data for use in the development and validation of a predictive, mechanistic model for brine inflow to the repository. There is considerable variability in the observed responses of the different boreholes, and there are also significant similarities. Two of the boreholes in Room D have yielded no brine in more than 3.5 years, while all 15 of the other boreholes have produced anywhere from 2 to 90 kg of brine. Inflow rates vary by as much as 2 orders of magnitude for boreholes of the same dimensions in the same general location; however, inflow rates measured in most of the boreholes are of the same order of magnitude. Decreasing, increasing, and steady inflow rates have been measured. Nevertheless, 9 of the 15 brine-producing boreholes behaved similarly early in their history. These 9 boreholes all exhibited a relatively high initial inflow rate followed by a fairly smooth decline with time. Variabilities in borehole response can be explained by assuming there are heterogeneities in the formation tested. In most cases these heterogeneities are believed to be excavation-induced. Data from these experiments suggest that flow near excavations has been altered by rock deformation, including fracturing. Additional experiments are required to differentiate between a far-field, near-field, or combination brine source and to characterize the significant flow mechanism or mechanisms.