A geoelectrical pre-study of Älvkarleby test embankment dam: 3D forward modelling and effects of structural constraints on the 3D inversion model of zoned embankment dams

Reyhaneh Norooz, Per-Ivar Olsson, Torleif Dahlin, Thomas Günther, Christian Bernstone

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Electrical resistivity tomography has potential as a complementary long-term monitoring method in embankment dams; however, the 3D character of the geometry including the shape of the embankment, its internal zoned construction and the reservoir water make interpretation challenging. To tackle this problem, a qualified inversion model considering the 3D environment is necessary. In this paper, prior information about the resistivity of different parts of a test embankment dam was used as constraints in order to increase the capability of defect detection in a complex 3D context. Five small defects were incorporated into the core of the model. Laboratory measurements were made on samples of the materials intended to be used for the construction of a test embankment dam, and resistivity values provided from the laboratory measurements were used in the forward modelling. A measurement sequence of around 8000 synthetic data points using extended gradient, crossline bipole-bipole and corner arrays between horizontal-horizontal, vertical-vertical, and vertical-horizontal lines were modelled and inverted all at once. The structural constraints were applied to increase the accuracy of inversion, using the L1 and L2 methods. Different mesh qualities with different boundaries for each region and 3D geometric factor calculation were applied for the inversion to evaluate the effects of region control incorporated in the inversion process. The results showed that L1 and L2 norm inversions combined with region control can determine the location of very small defects and finding the defects located near each other, respectively. Removing the region control from the inversion caused unrealistic resistivity prediction for some regions and the inability to discover the dam defects. Therefore, the proposed methodology can decrease non-uniqueness in the inversion and make time-lapse ERT a valuable monitoring tool that complements other instrumentation techniques and based on these results it was concluded promising to continue with the construction of the test dam using the same type of defects and electrode set-up, for verification under field-conditions.
Original languageEnglish
Article number104355
Number of pages14
JournalJournal of Applied Geophysics
Volume191
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology

Free keywords

  • Electrical resistivity tomography
  • Geoelectrical monitoring
  • Zoned embankment dam
  • Finite element method
  • Internal erosion
  • Structural constraints

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