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Dive into the research topics where T. Le Borgne is active.

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Featured researches published by T. Le Borgne.


Water Resources Research | 2014

Active-distributed temperature sensing to continuously quantify vertical flow in boreholes

T. Read; Olivier Bour; John S. Selker; V. F. Bense; T. Le Borgne; R. Hochreutener; Nicolas Lavenant

We show how a distributed borehole flowmeter can be created from armored Fiber Optic cables with the Active-Distributed Temperature Sensing (A-DTS) method. The principle is that in a flowing fluid, the difference in temperature between a heated and unheated cable is a function of the fluid velocity. We outline the physical basis of the methodology and report on the deployment of a prototype A-DTS flowmeter in a fractured rock aquifer. With this design, an increase in flow velocity from 0.01 to 0.3 m s−1 elicited a 2.5°C cooling effect. It is envisaged that with further development this method will have applications where point measurements of borehole vertical flow do not fully capture combined spatiotemporal dynamics.


Water Resources Research | 2016

Distributed temperature sensing as a down-hole tool in hydrogeology

Victor F. Bense; T. Read; Olivier Bour; T. Le Borgne; T. Coleman; Stefan Krause; A. Chalari; M. Mondanos; F. Ciocca; John S. Selker

Distributed Temperature Sensing (DTS) technology enables down-hole temperature monitoring to study hydrogeological processes at unprecedentedly high frequency and spatial resolution. DTS has been widely applied in passive mode in site investigations of groundwater flow, in-well flow, and subsurface thermal property estimation. However, recent years have seen the further development of the use of DTS in an active mode (A-DTS) for which heat sources are deployed. A suite of recent studies using A-DTS down-hole in hydrogeological investigations illustrate the wide range of different approaches and creativity in designing methodologies. The purpose of this review is to outline and discuss the various applications and limitations of DTS in down-hole investigations for hydrogeological conditions and aquifer geological properties. To this end, we first review examples where passive DTS has been used to study hydrogeology via down-hole applications. Secondly, we discuss and categorize current A-DTS borehole methods into three types. These are thermal advection tests, hybrid cable flow logging, and heat pulse tests. We explore the various options with regards to cable installation, heating approach, duration, and spatial extent in order to improve their applicability in a range of settings. These determine the extent to which each method is sensitive to thermal properties, vertical in well flow, or natural gradient flow. Our review confirms that the application of DTS has significant advantages over discrete point temperature measurements, particularly in deep wells, and highlights the potential for further method developments in conjunction with other emerging fiber optic based sensors such as Distributed Acoustic Sensing. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Journal of Contaminant Hydrology | 2013

Reaction chain modeling of denitrification reactions during a push–pull test

Alexandre Boisson; P. de Anna; Olivier Bour; T. Le Borgne; Thierry Labasque; Luc Aquilina

Field quantitative estimation of reaction kinetics is required to enhance our understanding of biogeochemical reactions in aquifers. We extended the analytical solution developed by Haggerty et al. (1998) to model an entire 1st order reaction chain and estimate the kinetic parameters for each reaction step of the denitrification process. We then assessed the ability of this reaction chain to model biogeochemical reactions by comparing it with experimental results from a push-pull test in a fractured crystalline aquifer (Ploemeur, French Brittany). Nitrates were used as the reactive tracer, since denitrification involves the sequential reduction of nitrates to nitrogen gas through a chain reaction (NO3(-)→NO2(-)→NO→N2O→N2) under anaerobic conditions. The kinetics of nitrate consumption and by-product formation (NO2(-), N2O) during autotrophic denitrification were quantified by using a reactive tracer (NO3(-)) and a non-reactive tracer (Br(-)). The formation of reaction by-products (NO2(-), N2O, N2) has not been previously considered using a reaction chain approach. Comparison of Br(-) and NO3(-) breakthrough curves showed that 10% of the injected NO3(-) molar mass was transformed during the 12 h experiment (2% into NO2(-), 1% into N2O and the rest into N2 and NO). Similar results, but with slower kinetics, were obtained from laboratory experiments in reactors. The good agreement between the model and the field data shows that the complete denitrification process can be efficiently modeled as a sequence of first order reactions. The 1st order kinetics coefficients obtained through modeling were as follows: k1=0.023 h(-1), k2=0.59 h(-1), k3=16 h(-1), and k4=5.5 h(-1). A next step will be to assess the variability of field reactivity using the methodology developed for modeling push-pull tracer tests.


Water Resources Research | 2012

Asymptotic dispersion for two-dimensional highly heterogeneous permeability fields under temporally fluctuating flow

J.-R. de Dreuzy; Jesus Carrera; Marco Dentz; T. Le Borgne

[1] Temporal fluctuations of water flux have been investigated as a mechanism that strongly enhances transverse dispersion in heterogeneous media. Unfortunately, most results have been obtained by linear stochastic theories on permeability fields of limited variability. Worse, results are inconsistent regarding the impact of fluctuations on longitudinal dispersion, which motivates our work to find the effect of temporal velocity fluctuations on macrodispersion. We perform numerical Monte Carlo simulations for highly variable permeability fields of up to 800 correlation lengths. We find that fluctuations longitudinal to the main flow direction hardly modify macrodispersion because they do not alter the flow lines. Fluctuations transverse to the main flow direction not only increase transverse dispersion, which is well known, but also reduce the longitudinal macrodispersion in a significant and consistent way, which contradicts previous findings. The reduction of the longitudinal dispersion is comparable to the increase of transverse dispersion. Most surprisingly, for high heterogeneity, temporal fluctuations cause total (longitudinal plus transverse) macrodispersion to drop with respect to the steady state one. Enhancement of the transverse macrodispersion comes from both the increase of the transverse velocity variability and Lagrangian correlation. Reduction of the longitudinal macrodispersion results from the reduction of the Lagrangian correlation of the longitudinal velocity. That is, temporal fluctuations reduce longitudinal spreading both by breaking the fastest velocity paths on the plume front and by letting solute bypass the low-permeability zones that tend to block or trap the solute in steady state flow conditions.


Journal of Contaminant Hydrology | 2017

Insights about transport mechanisms and fracture flow channeling from multi-scale observations of tracer dispersion in shallow fractured crystalline rock

N. Guihéneuf; Olivier Bour; Alexandre Boisson; T. Le Borgne; Matthew W. Becker; B. Nigon; M. Wajiduddin; S. Ahmed; Jean-Christophe Maréchal

In fractured media, solute transport is controlled by advection in open and connected fractures and by matrix diffusion that may be enhanced by chemical weathering of the fracture walls. These phenomena may lead to non-Fickian dispersion characterized by early tracer arrival time, late-time tailing on the breakthrough curves and potential scale effect on transport processes. Here we investigate the scale dependency of these processes by analyzing a series of convergent and push-pull tracer experiments with distance of investigation ranging from 4m to 41m in shallow fractured granite. The small and intermediate distances convergent experiments display a non-Fickian tailing, characterized by a -2 power law slope. However, the largest distance experiment does not display a clear power law behavior and indicates possibly two main pathways. The push-pull experiments show breakthrough curve tailing decreases as the volume of investigation increases, with a power law slope ranging from -3 to -2.3 from the smallest to the largest volume. The multipath model developed by Becker and Shapiro (2003) is used here to evaluate the hypothesis of the independence of flow pathways. The multipath model is found to explain the convergent data, when increasing local dispersivity and reducing the number of pathways with distance which suggest a transition from non-Fickian to Fickian transport at fracture scale. However, this model predicts an increase of tailing with push-pull distance, while the experiments show the opposite trend. This inconsistency may suggest the activation of cross channel mass transfer at larger volume of investigation, which leads to non-reversible heterogeneous advection with scale. This transition from independent channels to connected channels when the volume of investigation increases suggest that both convergent and push-pull breakthrough curves can inform the existence of characteristic length scales.


Journal of Hydrology | 2006

Assessment of preferential flow path connectivity and hydraulic properties at single-borehole and cross-borehole scales in a fractured aquifer

T. Le Borgne; Olivier Bour; Frederick L. Paillet; Jean-Pierre Caudal


Water Resources Research | 2004

Equivalent mean flow models for fractured aquifers: Insights from a pumping tests scaling interpretation

T. Le Borgne; Olivier Bour; J.-R. de Dreuzy; Philippe Davy; F. Touchard


Journal of Hydrology | 2007

Comparison of alternative methodologies for identifying and characterizing preferential flow paths in heterogeneous aquifers

T. Le Borgne; Olivier Bour; Michael S. Riley; P. Gouze; Philippe A. Pezard; A. Belghoul; G. Lods; R. Le Provost; Richard B. Greswell; Paul A. Ellis; E. Isakov


Geophysical Research Letters | 2013

Characterizing groundwater flow and heat transport in fractured rock using fiber‐optic distributed temperature sensing

T. Read; Olivier Bour; V. F. Bense; T. Le Borgne; Pascal Goderniaux; Maria Klepikova; Rebecca Hochreutener; Nicolas Lavenant; V. Boschero


Water Resources Research | 2011

Effective pore‐scale dispersion upscaling with a correlated continuous time random walk approach

T. Le Borgne; Diogo Bolster; Marco Dentz; P. de Anna; Alexandre M. Tartakovsky

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Marco Dentz

Spanish National Research Council

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T. Read

University of East Anglia

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Jesus Carrera

Spanish National Research Council

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Alexandre M. Tartakovsky

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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