• Title/Summary/Keyword: time-lapse electrical imaging monitoring

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Time-lapse Resistivity Investigations for Imaging Subsurface Grout during Ground Stabilization

  • Farooq, Muhammad;Park, Sam-Gyu;Kim, Jung-Ho;Song, Young-Soo
    • 한국지구물리탐사학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2007.06a
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    • pp.241-244
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    • 2007
  • Cement-grouts are injected into limestone cavities beneath the road in the project area, in order to improve strength and reduce permeability; the extent to which grout has penetrated in cavities need to be monitored in order to determined effectiveness of cement-grout. Geophysical approaches, offer great potential for monitoring the grout injection process in a fast and cost-effective way as well as showing whether the grout has successfully achieved the target. This paper presents the ability of surface electrical resistivity to investigate the verification of the grout placement. In order to image the cement-grout, time-lapse surface electrical resistivity surveys were conducted to compare electrical resistivity images before and after injection. Cement-grout was imaged as anomalies exhibiting low resistivity than the surrounding rocks. In accordance with field monitoring, laboratory study was also designed to monitor the resistivity changes of cement-grout specimens with time-lapse. Time-lapse laboratory measurements indicated that electrical methods are good tool to identify the grouted zone. Pre-and post grouting electrical images showed significant changes in subsurface resistivity at grouted zone. The study showed that electrical resistivity imaging technology can be a useful tool for detecting and evaluating changes in subsurface resistivity due to the injection of the grout.

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High-Current Time-Lapse Electrical Imaging in Marine Sediments Area (해성퇴적층 하부지반 대전류 time-lapse 전기탐사)

  • Jung, Hyun-Key;Geo, Dong-Kweon Lee
    • 한국지구물리탐사학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2006.06a
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    • pp.109-112
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    • 2006
  • Successful field test results for high-current time-lapse electrical imaging in marine sediments area are discussed. Because field trial by commercially available equipments were failed, self-developed system which supports transmitting current up to 5 ampere was used. Some weak zones due to local fractures were detected, but the weak zone effect in this area by time-lapse measurements from sea level change was minor.

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Application of 4-D resistivity imaging technique to visualize the migration of injected materials in subsurface (지하주입 물질 거동 규명을 위한 4차원 전기비저항 영상화)

  • Kim, Jung-Ho;Yi, Myeong-Jong
    • 한국지구물리탐사학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2007.12a
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    • pp.31-42
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    • 2007
  • Dc resistivity monitoring has been increasingly used in order to understand the changes of subsurface conditions in terms of conductivity. The commonly adopted interpretation approach which separately inverts time-lapse data may generate inversion artifacts due to measurement error. Eventually the contaminated error amplifies the artifacts when reconstructing the difference images to quantitatively estimate the change of ground condition. In order to alleviate the problems, we defined the subsurface structure as four dimensional (4-D) space-time model and developed 4-D inversion algorithm which can calculate the reasonable subsurface structure continuously changing in time even when the material properties change during data measurements. In this paper, we discussed two case histories of resistivity monitoring to study the ground condition change when the properties of the subsurface material were artificially altered by injecting conductive materials into the ground: (1) dye tracer experiment to study the applicability of electrical resistivity tomography to monitoring of water movement in soil profile and (2) the evaluation of cement grouting performed to reinforce the ground. Through these two case histories, we demonstrated that the 4-D resistivity imaging technique is very powerful to precisely delineate the change of ground condition. Particularly owing to the 4-D inversion algorithm, we were able to reconstruct the history of the change of subsurface material property.

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