Horizontal Filter Well System And Method Of Operating Same

A method of operating a horizontal filter well. Water is transported into a well from at least one roughly horizontally arranged train and distributed further from there. Pressurized water is forced through the horizontal filter train in the reverse flow direction, as a means to free the horizontal filter train of blockages. The pressurized water exits through the inlet orifices of the horizontal filter train and passes into the aquifer. A vertical well provided in the vicinity of the horizontal filter train suctions off the water exiting from the horizontal filter train, along with impurities removed from the horizontal filter train.

Skip to: Description  ·  Claims  · Patent History  ·  Patent History
Description
BACKGROUND INFORMATION

1. Field of the Invention

The invention relates to a horizontal filter well system and a method of same. More particularly, the invention relates to reverse-flow method of cleaning horizontal filter trains. More particularly yet, the invention relates to a method of removing impurities from the area surrounding the horizontal filter trains.

2. Description of the Prior Art

Horizontal filter wells are known in the everyday world. After years of operation, the inlets of the one or more horizontal filter trains in a well may become blocked. The inlets can be opened and freed of the obstructions by reversible flow or backwashing with pressurized water. The disadvantage of this conventional method is that the period is relatively short before the horizontal filter trains need to be cleaned again. As a result, the longer the horizontal filter well is operated, the shorter the intervals between cleanings become. Eventually, it becomes uneconomical to operate the horizontal filter well.

It is an object of the invention to provide a well system and a method of operating such a system, that greatly increases the operating time during which the horizontal well trains are functioning properly. It is a further object to provide such a system and method that improves the economic performance of such horizontal well filters over a longer period of time.

BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The object is achieved by a method and a well system that use pressurized water in a reverse-flow direction to clean groundwater inlets in a horizontal filter train. More particularly, the method and system provide the use of a vertical well, sunk into the ground near the horizontal filter train, the vertical well pumping the reverse-flow water away from the underground and, along with the reverses-flow water, by collecting and pumping out impurities that were forced out of inlets in the horizontal filter train.

The invention proposes to extract the released contaminants while cleaning the horizontal filter trains. The method and system according to the invention extract contaminants that have been expelled from the horizontal filter train during a cleaning operation. Without such an extraction, impurities near the horizontal filter train remain in the ground nearby the horizontal filter train and are subsequently pulled back in, so that they re-enter the horizontal filter train relatively quickly. The method according to the invention pumps water out of a vertical well that is sunken near the horizontal filter train whenever the horizontal filter train is cleaned by backwashing. This pumping action creates a flow of water through the substrate into the vertical well. The term “substrate” as used herein refers to the area in the ground that is in the vicinity of the horizontal filter train. The impurities are thus flushed away from the horizontal filter train and removed from substrate through the vertical well. This increases the interval between cleanings of the horizontal filter train, which greatly increases the period of economic operation of the horizontal filter well.

Preferably, the water that is pumped from the vertical well is maintained in a closed loop, so as to minimize contact with underground water supply. The water coming from the vertical well is filtered and immediately reusable for backwashing the horizontal filter train.

Alternatively, the method may pump water from the vertical well, which is laden with impurities, and store it in a reservoir for later treatment. This is especially desirable, if a cleaning agent is added to the pressurized water to improve its cleansing effect when backwashing the horizontal filter train. This wastewater full of cleaning agents may, for example, be stored temporarily in a tank truck, which serves as the aforementioned reservoir, and subsequently be transported to a suitable treatment plant.

Cleaning the horizontal filter train improves the pumping capacity of this horizontal filter train, which had previously continuously decreased. The pumping capacity is affected, however, not only by blocked inlets in the horizontal filter train itself, but also by the fact that, cracks and other small cavities in the surrounding earth, through which the water flows into the horizontal filter train, are closed or blocked. The cleaning operation on the horizontal filter train, during which water is pumped through the vertical well, also advantageously results in a “cleaning” or loosening of the surrounding earth. For this purpose, a high-pressure injection train is arranged horizontally in the ground near the horizontal filter train. In the case of two adjacent horizontal filter trains, which, for example, are arranged at a 90° angle, the high-pressure injection train is arranged at an angle that approximately bisects the angle formed by the two horizontal filter trains, in order to achieve the most uniform effect on the two adjacent horizontal filter trains. The injection material, which is forced into the substrate by the high-pressure injection train, loosens the earth and breaks up sedimentation that has settled in the spaces that exist in the substrate, so that groundwater is subsequently able to flow through the spaces that have now been reopened.

The vertical well near the aforementioned horizontal transport train, including a specially sunken vertical well, is provided near the high-pressure injection train. This vertical well is used to pump the injection material or also the loosened sedimentation in the underground from the underground. Here, too, the water coming from this vertical well is either filtered and reused, that is, is pumped in a closed loop during the cleaning process, or, alternatively, temporarily stored and then transported to a treatment plant.

In addition to the aforementioned method steps, the horizontal filter trains may be cleaned mechanically in the conventional manner, for example, by means of a cleaning lance and with pressure, which is a commonly known method.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The present invention is described with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the drawings, like reference numbers indicate identical or functionally similar elements.

FIG. 1 is a plane elevational view of the horizontal filter train.

FIG. 2 is a plane elevational view of the well shaft, indicating a plurality of horizontal filter trains and showing injection sites on the RSFA.

FIG. 3 is a vertical cut through a portion of a horizontal filter train and RSFA.

FIG. 4 is a top plane view of the well shaft, showing a plurality of horizontal filter trains, high-pressure injection trains, and vertical wells.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

In the drawings, a horizontal filter well is generally designated by 1, a well shaft by 2, and a well house 3 arranged above it. Several horizontal filter trains 4 open into the well shaft 2 below, whereby in FIG. 1 only one such horizontal filter train 4 is shown. The horizontal filter train 4 has a plurality of inlets 5, which are shown as slots in FIG. 1 and through which water from the surrounding layers of earth flows into the horizontal filter train 4.

The horizontal filter train 4 is connected inside the well shaft 2 to a reversing single-train flange adapter 6, hereinafter referred to as RSFA. The RSFA 6 has a connection for a pressurized water line 7 on its upper face end. Pressurized water is pumped by pressure pump 8 through the pressurized water line 7 into the RSFA 6.

To clean the horizontal filter train 4, pressurized water is pumped through the pressurized water line 7 into the RSFA 6 by a pressure pump 8. From the RSFA 6 it flows into the horizontal filter train 4 and exits the horizontal filter train 4 through the inlets 5, moving into the surrounding layers of earth. The pressurized water flows through the horizontal filter train 4 in a direction that is the reverse of the direction of normal flow of water into the horizontal filter train. During this reverse flow process, impurities or debris which are clogging or restricting the size of the inlets 5 are flushed from the inlets, with the result that these inlets 5 become open again. The debris being expelled from the horizontal filter train 4 is shown schematically in FIG. 1 as a nebulous agglomeration surrounding the far end of the train.

A vertical well 9 is sunken adjacent to the horizontal filter train 4. This vertical well 9 has openings that are crude, compared to the inlets 5 of the horizontal filter train 4. A pumping operation of this vertical well 9 pumps away the pressurized water that was used to flush out the horizontal filter train 4, and also pulls debris or impurities into the vertical well 9, which are then pumped out. This achieves a long-lasting cleaning effect for the horizontal filter train 4. In addition, the area around the horizontal filter train 4 is cleaned of debris, which, if left there, would re-clog the inlets 5 within a relatively short period following the cleaning process.

The water that was previously used for cleaning the horizontal filter train 4 is pumped up through and out of the vertical well 9. Subsequently, it may be fed through a closed-loop line I1 to the pressure pump 8, whence it may be pumped through the pressurized water line and the RSFA 6 back into the horizontal filter train 4 to be re-used as a cleaning fluid. Alternatively, the water pumped from the vertical well 9 may be pumped into a temporary reservoir, such as a tank truck, via a discharge line 12 for subsequent water treatment. Subsequent water treatment may be desirable, particularly if a cleaning agent is added to the pressurized water. Cleaning agents may be pumped from tanks 14 via appropriate lines to injection sites 15, where they are injected into the RSFA 6 and, together with the pressurized water, subsequently flow into the horizontal filter train 4. The three tanks 14, which are shown merely by way of example, illustrate that different additives may be mixed with the pressurized water. These additives shall be referred to as “cleaning agents” hereinafter, regardless of their properties and effects.

A plurality of valves 16 are shown schematically in FIG. 1, whereby not all valves 16 are marked with the reference numeral. The valves allow one to control the flow of the water. The water may be pumped, for example, through a circuit line or to the discharge line 12. Thus, for example, water that is pumped from the vertical well 9 may initially be pumped into a centrifuge 17. The centrifuge 17 is used to remove debris and impurities from the water that have been pumped up through the vertical well 9. The purified or filtered water may then be pumped from the centrifuge 17 to the pressure pump 8 and made available there again for cleaning the horizontal filter train 4. Advantageously, the pressure pump 8 builds up a pressure of more than 5 bars, which ensures reliable cleaning of the inlets 5 of the horizontal filter train 4.

A high-pressure injection train 18 is also shown in FIG. 1. In the schematic illustration, the high-pressure injection train 18 appears to lie directly opposite the horizontal filter train 4. In reality, however, the high-pressure injection train 18 extends at an angle between two horizontal filter trains 4, as shown particularly clearly in FIG. 4, bisecting the angle formed by two horizontal filter trains 4.

A reservoir 19, which contains injection material, is provided next to the well house 3. This injection material may also be pumped to the pressure pump 8, for example, using a rotary pump 20. The pressure pump 8 subsequently pumps the injection material into the high-pressure injection train 18 via the pressurized water line 7 and the RSFA 6. Connector flanges are provided on the RSFA 6 and the corresponding trains 4 and 18. The RSFA 6 is shifted inside the well shaft 2 and connected via the connector flanges to the horizontal filter train 4 and/or high-pressure injection train 18. A locking slide 21 is preferably arranged between the RSFA 6 and the respective trains 4 and 18. The locking slide 21 may be operated remotely, for example, by a handwheel 22 in the well house 3, as shown schematically in FIG. 1.

FIG. 2 illustrates a method of operating the horizontal filter well for water catchment. For purposes of illustration only, the RSFA 6 is shown mounted on one of the three horizontal filter trains 4 shown in FIG. 2. In particular, an RSFA 6 may connected to each of the horizontal filter trains 4.

In the embodiment depicted in FIG. 2, three water lines 24 lead from the horizontal filter trains 4 or the RSFAs 6 to a water main 25. Each of the horizontal filter trains 4 are arranged offset 900 to one another, so that a fourth horizontal filter train 4 in fact exists, but is not visible due in the cross-sectional view in FIG. 2, because it is aligned with the horizontal filter train 4 that is shown in the center of the well shaft 2. A water-supply line 24, also not shown in FIG. 2, also runs from this fourth horizontal filter train 4 to the water main 25.

In the embodiment shown in FIG. 2, the well shaft 2 can be operated using a so-called “dry” operating method in which the water level of the groundwater drawdown cone 27 does not adjust in the well shaft 2 itself, but rather adjusts in the RSFA 6 or in the water-supply lines 24 of the individual horizontal filter trains 4. An immersion pump 26 is provided in the each RSFA 6, which pumps water from the relevant horizontal filter train 4 to the water main 25. Each of the four horizontal filter trains 4 has its own flange adapter in the form of an RSFA 6. This arrangement particularly allows each horizontal train 4 to be individually pumped and sampled.

FIG. 3 shows a cross-sectional cut through the lower area of the well shaft 2 and a portion of the RSFA 6. The mounting flange 23 may be used not only to connect an additional horizontal filter train 4, but also to insert a cleaning tool directly opposite the horizontal filter train 4 into the RSFA 6. The tool may be guided through the RSFA 6 into the horizontal filter train 4, so that this train may be cleaned from the inside in a conventional manner, either mechanically using the cleaning tool or using compressed air or pressurized water. A camera may also be introduced here and guided into the horizontal filter train 4.

The water level inside the RSFA 6 is marked with 27. A water probe 28 is used to protect the immersion pump 26 from dry operation, and to ensure that water is always available at an inlet 29 of this immersion pump 26. The water probe 28 may be used to either analyze the water or at least determine the height of the water level 27, so that, if the water level 27 should sink, pumping in this horizontal filter train 4 is slowed or stopped.

Injection sites 15 are used to inject cleaning agents into the pressurized water during the reverse-flow operation of the RSFA 6, that is, during the cleaning of the horizontal filter train 4. Each of the injection sites has a mounting flange. During the pumping operation of the well, sensors may be inserted into these injection sites 15, for taking measurements during the pumping operation. Such measurements would be different, for example, from the measurements taken by the water probe 28. Furthermore, the RSFA 6 also has a relatively small drain connection 30 below the mounting flange 23, by means of which the RSFA 6 can be completely drained.

FIG. 4 schematically shows the layout of a well shaft 2 having four horizontal filter trains 4, each of which is offset by 90° from the other, as well as four high-pressure injection trains 18, each of which extends into the well shaft at an angle that bisects the angle formed by adjacent horizontal filter trains 4. Schematic representations of vertical wells 9 are shown distributed around this horizontal filter well 1. During cleansing or regeneration operations on the horizontal filter well 1, water, cleaning agents, impurities and, if necessary, also injection material may be pumped out through these vertical wells 9. It is understood that the embodiments described herein are merely illustrative of the present invention. Variations in the construction of the horizontal filter well and in the method steps may be contemplated by one skilled in the art without limiting the intended scope of the invention herein disclosed and as defined by the following claims.

Claims

1-13. (canceled)

14. A method for operating a horizontal filter well having at least one horizontal filter train buried in substrate for collecting water that flows through said substrate, said water flowing in a normal flow direction from said substrate through inlets in said horizontal filter train into a well shaft, said method comprising the steps of:

a) pumping pressurized water in a reverse flow direction through said horizontal filter train, said pressurized water being expelled through said inlets into said substrate;
b) providing a vertical well near to said horizontal filter train;
c) suctioning water and impurities that have been expelled from said horizontal filter train into said vertical well; and
d) pumping said expelled water and impurities out of said vertical well.

15. The method of claim 14 further comprising the steps of

e) filtering said expelled water; and
f) pressurizing and pumping said filtered water into said horizontal filter train.

16. The method of claim 14 further comprising the step of:

g) pumping said expelled water from said vertical well into a reservoir for subsequent water treatment.

17. The method of claim 15 further comprising the step of:

h) adding a cleaning agent to said pressurized water.

18. The method of claim 16, wherein said reservoir is a tank truck.

19. The method of claim 1 further comprising the steps of:

i) installing two or more horizontal filter trains underground, any two adjacent horizontal filter trains forming a filter-train angle;
j) installing a high-pressure injection train horizontally underground at an angle that bisects said filter-train angle;
k) injecting material under high-pressure into said substrate via said high-pressure injection train, so as to break up underground sediment and create new flow spaces for groundwater.

20. The method of claim 19 comprising the steps of:

l) installing a vertical well near to one of said two horizontal filter trains and to said high-pressure injection train.

21. The method of claim 1 further comprising the step of:

m) cleaning said horizontal filter train with a cleaning lance.

22. A well system having a vertical well shaft extending below ground, said system comprising:

a horizontal filter train having a proximal end and a distal end, wherein said proximal end is within said well shaft and said distal end extends extending horizontally beyond said well shaft into substrate;
a vertical well installed outside said well shaft and near to said distal end of said horizontal filter train.

23. The well system of claim 22, wherein said vertical well is sunken radially beyond said distal end of said horizontal filter train.

24. The well system of claim 22, wherein said proximal end of said horizontal filter train is fitted with a flange connector, and wherein a reversing adapter is connectible to said flange connector.

25. The well system of 24, wherein said reversing adapter is connected to a pressurized water line.

26. The well system of claim 24, wherein said reversing adapter has a closable opening that is positioned directly opposite said horizontal filter train and is adapted to accommodate insertion of a cleaning lance.

27. The well system of claim 24 further comprising a cleaning agent container and a conduit for pumping a cleaning agent into said reversing adapter.

28. The well system of claim 22 further comprising a recycling circuit for recycling reverse-flow water that is pumped into said reversing adapter and out said distal end of said horizontal filter train, wherein expelled water that is expelled from said distal end of said horizontal filter train and that contains impurities is pumped up through said vertical well, subjected to a water-purification treatment, and then pumped back through said reversing adapter into said horizontal filter train.

29. The well system of claim 28, said recycling circuit comprising water-treatment apparatus and a pump system for pumping said expelled water through said water-treatment system.

30. The well system of claim 29, wherein said water-treatment apparatus includes a centrifuge.

31. The well system of claim 29, wherein said water-treatment apparatus includes a temporary storage tank that carries said expelled water to an off-site water-treatment facility.

32. The well system of claim 29, wherein said pump system includes a first pump for pumping said expelled water from said vertical well and a second pump for pumping said expelled water through said water-treatment system.

33. The well system of claim 22, further comprising a high-pressure injection train that is installed in a horizontal alignment near to said horizontal filter train and a high-pressure water line that forces water through said high-pressure train and into said substrate, to loosen earth material and break up sedimentation.

34. A well system having a vertical well shaft extending below ground into a substrate, said system comprising:

a plurality of horizontal filter trains arranged in said substrate, each horizontal filter train of said plurality having a proximal end and a distal end, wherein said proximal end is within said well shaft and said distal end extends horizontally and radially beyond said well shaft into said substrate;
a plurality of reverse-flow single-train flange adapters, each reverse-flow single-train adapter being connected to a single horizontal filter train of said plurality of horizontal filter trains;
a plurality of high-pressure injection trains, said second plurality corresponding in number to said first plurality, with a proximal end of each one high-pressure injection train of said high-pressure injection trains being within said well shaft and a proximal end extending horizontally and radially beyond said well shaft;
a plurality of vertical wells that are placed in close proximity to said distal end of at least one of said high-pressure injection trains and to said distal end of at least one of said high-pressure injection trains; and
a water circulation system for pumping water through said horizontal filter trains from said proximal end toward said distal end and through said high-pressure injection trains from said proximal end toward said distal end;
wherein said high-pressure injection trains and said horizontal filter trains are placed in an alternating horizontal-filter-train-and-high-pressure-injection-train arrangement.

35. The well system of claim 34, wherein said water circulation system includes a first pump for pumping water expelled from said horizontal filter trains and high-pressure injection trains up through said vertical well.

36. The well system of claim 35, further comprising a water-treatment system for cleaning said expelled water of impurities so that it is re-usable for pumping through said horizontal filter trains and high-pressure injection trains.

37. The well system of claim 36, wherein said water-treatment system is a centrifuge.

38. The well system of claim 34 further comprising a cleaning agent reservoir, wherein said reverse-flow single-train flange adapters have inlets that are connected to said cleaning agent reservoir via a cleaning-agent line, and wherein a cleaning agent is injected into said reverse-flow single-train flange adapter, to be pushed through said horizontal filter train that is connected to said reverse-flow single-train flange adapter.

Patent History
Publication number: 20090044936
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 10, 2006
Publication Date: Feb 19, 2009
Inventor: Wilhelm Felix Schulz (Steinfurt)
Application Number: 11/917,289
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: Wells With Lateral Conduits (166/50); Distinct, Separate Injection And Producing Wells (166/268)
International Classification: E21B 43/00 (20060101); E03B 3/15 (20060101);