Development and Validation of a Low-cost DC Resistivity Meter for Humanitarian Geophysics Applications
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Abstract
Insufficient access to safe drinking water is one of the most challenging global humanitarian
issues. The development of low-cost microcontrollers and the widespread availability
of cheap electronics components raise the possibility of developing and using low-cost geophysical
instrumentation with open-source designs and software solutions to circumvent
geophysical instrumentation capital cost issues. To these ends, we alter an existing low-cost
DC resistivity meter design and develop an optional modular Raspberry Pi data-logging system
to improve the unit’s functionality, usability and to ensure data integrity. Numerical
modeling and physical testing demonstrates that the system is more robust than previously
published low-cost designs and works in a more diverse range of geological scenarios
- especially conductive environments. Our instrument was tested in a Geoscientists Without
Borders (GWB) project jointly run between researchers from Colorado School of Mines (CSM) and Universit´e d’Abomey-Calavi (UAC), Cotonou, Benin. A key project component
involved CSM and UAC students constructing and validating two low-cost DC resistivity
meters and then using these instruments for fieldwork aimed at better characterizing and
monitoring the health of a local aquifer used as a groundwater source for communities in the
Cotonou region. The low-cost instruments were successfully used alongside a commercial
resistivity meter to acquire data for 2D inversion of aquifer hydrostratigraphy , indicating
the presence of a clay-sand contact. The cost of the redesigned instrument and data logger
respectively are $177 and $108 (in 2021 USD) with future cost reductions possible, which
are fractions of the price of commercial resistivity meters.
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This paper presented here as accepted for publication in Geophysics prior to copyediting and composition.
