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Cross-Well Radar. I: Experimental Simulation of Cross-Well Tomography and Validation
Authors:Arvin Farid  Akram N Alshawabkeh  Carey M Rappaport
Affiliation:1Assistant Professor, Dept. of Civil Engineering, Boise State Univ., 1910 University Dr., MS 2075, Boise, ID 83725–2075 (corresponding author). E-mail: ArvinFarid@BoiseState.edu
2Professor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Northeastern Univ., 400 Snell Engineering Center, 360 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02115. E-mail: aalsha@coe.neu.edu
3Professor, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Northeastern Univ., 302 Sterns Building, 360 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02115. E-mail: rappaport@ece.neu.edu
Abstract:This paper explains and evaluates the potential and limitations of conducting cross-well radar (CWR) in sandy soils. Implementing the experiment and data collection in the absence of any scattering object, and in the presence of an acrylic plate a representative of dielectric objects, such as dense nonaqueous phase liquid (DNAPL) pools, etc.], as a contrasting object in a water-saturated soil is also studied. To be able to image the signature of any object, more than one pair of receiving and transmitting antennas are required. The paper describes a method to achieve repeatable, reliable, and reproducible laboratory results for different transmitter-receiver combinations. Different practical methods were evaluated for collecting multiple-depth data. Similarity of the corresponding results and problems involved in each method are studied and presented. The data show that the frequency response of a saturated coarse-grained soil is smooth due to the continuous and dominant nature of water in saturated soils. The repeatability and potential symmetry of patterns across some borehole axes provide a valuable tool for validation of experimental results. The potential asymmetry across other borehole axes is used as a tool to evaluate the strength of the perturbation on the electromagnetic field due to hidden objects and to evaluate the feasibility of detecting dielectric objects (such as DNAPL pools, etc.) using CWR. The experimental simulation of this paper models a real-life problem in a smaller scale, in a controlled laboratory environment, and within homogeneous soils that are uniformly dry or fully water saturated, with a uniform dielectric property contrast between the inclusion and background. The soil in the field will not be as homogeneous and uniform. The scaling process takes into consideration that as the size is scaled down; the frequency needs to be scaled up. It is noteworthy that this scaling process needs to be extensively studied and validated for future extension of the models to real-field applications. For example, to extend the outcome of this work to the real field, the geometry (antenna size, their separation and inclusion size) needs to be scaled up back to the field size, while soil grains will not. Therefore, soil, water, and air coupling effects and interactions observed at the laboratory scale do not scale up in the field, and may have different unforeseen effects that require extensive study.
Keywords:Radar  Saturated soils  Computer aided simulation  Antennas  Radiography  Validation  
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