4.5 Article

Spatial-temporal assessment and redesign of groundwater quality monitoring network: a case study

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume 172, Issue 1-4, Pages 263-273

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-010-1332-8

Keywords

Groundwater quality monitoring; Discrete entropy theory; Fuzzy cluster analysis; Temporal frequency; Tehran-Karadj aquifer

Funding

  1. Iran Water Resources Organization, Ministry of Energy, Iran

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Assessment of groundwater quality monitoring networks requires methods to determine the potential efficiency and cost-effectiveness of the current monitoring programs. To this end, the concept of entropy has been considered as a promising method in previous studies since it quantitatively measures the information produced by a network. In this study, the measure of transinformation in the discrete entropy theory and the transinformation-distance (T-D) curves, which are used frequently by other researchers, are used to quantify the efficiency of a monitoring network. This paper introduces a new approach to decrease dispersion in results by performing cluster analysis that uses fuzzy equivalence relations. As a result, the sampling (temporal) frequency determination method also recommends the future sampling frequencies for each location based on certain criteria such as direction, magnitude, correlation with neighboring stations, and uncertainty of the concentration trend derived from representative historical concentration data. The proposed methodology is applied to groundwater resources in the Tehran-Karadj aquifer, Tehran, Iran.

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