I have been looking at a similar issue with Linq to Sql - initially our solution is to use the same connection per request. Rick Strahl has done a series of blog posts on this which were worth looking at.
In our solution the DataContext constructor(s) have an overloaded constructor that retrieves the connection from a factory (if no connection exists, the connection passed is stored on the thread)
public DataContext1(connection)
: base (ConnectionFactory.GetConnectionFromContext(connection))
{
}
This seems to work fine in a WCF scenario, the connection factory can store / retrieve from the ServiceModel.OperationContext.Items collection, and (more importantly) subscribe to the OperationComplete event in order to Close / Dispose the connection on the thread when all operations are done.
I found that we also needed to extend the connection object such that you can prevent automatic closure / diposal of the internal connection when the owning datacontext is disposed (e.g. after each operation scope completes).
I'm looking at the non-WCF scenarios now... TBH it's not pretty. We also don't have the 'OperationCompleted' event trigger that's there in the WCF context.