Procedure to Determine if Flow to a Pumping Well is Steady-State1


1Kruseman, G.P. and N.A. de Ridder, Analysis and Evaluation of Pumping Test Data (Second Edition), Publication 47; International Institute for Land Reclamation and Improvement, Wageningen, 1994.

In practice, flow to a pumping well is considered steady-state when the difference in drawdown between piezometers becomes negligible, i.e., when the gradient between the piezometers becomes constant. The following procedures can be used to determine whether flow to a well is steady-state.

Procedure 1:

  1. Create a semi-log plot of drawdown (s) vs. time (t) for all piezometers (Fig. 1). Drawdown is plotted on the vertical, linear axis, while time is plotted on the horizontal, logarithmic axis.
  2. Draw a best-fit curve through the data for each piezometer. The curves for the piezometers may become parallel for the data collected late in the pump test. If this is the case, then the gradients are constant and the system has reached steady-state.
  3. Where two curves are parallel, read the steady-state drawdown (s) for each piezometer at the end of the test. Calculate the corresponding heads (h = saturated thickness - drawdown) and substitute these values with the corresponding radii into the Dupuit equation or tool.
  4. Repeat 3 for any combination of piezometers with parallel time-drawdown curves. If the aquifer is truly homogeneous, then the different combinations of piezometers should yield a similar hydraulic conductivity (K). Different values of transmissivity suggest that the aquifer is heterogeneous, in which case, the mean of the values is used as a final result.
Figure 1: Sample time-drawdown graph produced in Procedure 1. Note that the gradient between piezometer H215 and the other piezometers is not constant (curves are not parallel) and therefore this piezometer would not be used to calculated transmissivity by the Thiem method.

Procedure 2:
  1. Create a semi-log plot of observed drawdown (s) for each piezometer vs. the distance of the piezometer from the well (Fig. 2).
  2. Draw a best-fit line through the plotted points.
  3. Pick two colinear points (not necessarily observed data points) and substitute values of r1,2 and h1,2 into the tool (h = saturated thickness - drawdown).

    Figure 2: Sample distance-drawdown graph used in Procedure 2.