The influence of thermal boundary conditions of wellbore on the heat extraction performance of deep borehole heat exchangers

Geothermics ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
pp. 102325
Author(s):  
Jiashu LI ◽  
Chuanshan DAI ◽  
Haiyan LEI
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgia Dalla Santa ◽  
Simonetta Cola ◽  
Antonio Galgaro

<p>In closed-loop Ground Source Heat Pump system, the circulation of a heat-carrier fluid into the heat exchanger provides the thermal exchange with the underground.</p><p>In order to improve the heat extraction from the ground, the fluid temperature is often lowered down to subzero temperatures; as a consequence, the thermal alteration induced in the ground is more intense and can cause freezing processes in the surroundings. In sediments with significant clay fraction, the inner structure and the pore size distribution are irreversibly altered by freezing-thawing cycles.</p><p>A wide laboratory program has been performed in order to measure the induced deformations and the permeability variations under different conditions of mechanical loads/depth [1], interstitial water salinity [2] and soil plasticity [3]. In addition, vertical deformations and permeability variations induced by freeze-thaw cycles have been measured also in Over-Consolidated silty clays at different OCR [4].</p><p>The results suggest that, despite the induced frozen condition is quite confined close to the borehole [5], in Normal-Consolidated silty clay layers the freezing-thawing-cycles induce an irreversible settlement up to 16%, gathered cycle-after cycle depending on sediment plasticity, pore fluid salinity and applied load. In addition, despite the overall contraction of the soil, the vertical hydraulic conductivity may increase by about 8 times due to a remarkable modification of the soil fabric with increases in pore size, pores connectivity and orientation [6].</p><p>The OC silty-clays show an opposite behavior. Experimental results point out that, in case of OC deposits, higher the OCR lower the freeze-thaw induced settlement. In case of OCR > 15, the settlement turns to a slight expansion. Conversely, the observed augment in vertical permeability increases with the OCR degree [4].</p><p>These occurrences are significant and irreversible and could affect the functionality of the system as well as lead to environmental effects such as local settlements, negative friction on the borehole heat exchangers or interconnection among aquifers in the probe surroundings.</p><ul><li>[1]. Dalla Santa G*, Galgaro A, Tateo F, Cola S (2016). Modified compressibility of cohesive sediments induced by thermal anomalies due to a borehole heat exchanger. <strong>Engineering Geology</strong> 202, 143-152.</li> <li>[2]. Dalla Santa G*, Galgaro A, Tateo F, Cola S (2016). Induced thermal compaction in cohesive sediments around a borehole heat exchanger: laboratory tests on the effect of pore water salinity. <strong>Environmental Earth Sciences</strong>, 75(3), 1-11.</li> <li>[3]. Cola S, Dalla Santa G, Galgaro A (2020). Geotechnical hazards caused by freezing-thawing processes induced by borehole heat exchangers. <strong>Lecture Notes in Civil Engineering</strong>, 40, pp. 529–536</li> <li>[4]. Dalla Santa G, Cola S, Galgaro A (2021). Deformation and Vertical Permeability Variations Induced by Freeze-Thaw Cycles in Over-Consolidated Silty Clays. <strong>Challenges and Innovations in Geomechanics</strong>, 117</li> <li>[5]. Dalla Santa G*, Farina Z, Anbergen H, Rühaak W, Galgaro A (2019). A Comparative Study on the Relevance of Computing Freeze-Thaw Effects for Borehole Heat Exchanger Modelling. <strong>Geothermics</strong> 79, 164-175.</li> <li>[6]. Dalla Santa G*, Cola S, Secco M, Tateo F, Sassi R, Galgaro A (2019). Multiscale analysis of freeze-thaw effects induced by ground heat exchangers on permeability of silty-clays. <strong>Geotechnique</strong> 2019, 69(2).</li> </ul>


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaiu Piipponen ◽  
Annu Martinkauppi ◽  
Sami Vallin ◽  
Teppo Arola ◽  
Nina Leppäharju ◽  
...  

Abstract The energy sector is undergoing a fundamental transformation, with significant investment in low-carbon technologies to replace fossil-based systems. In densely populated urban areas, deep boreholes offer an alternative over shallow geothermal systems, which demand extensive surface area to attain large-scale heat production. This paper presents numerical calculations of the thermal energy that can be extracted from the medium-deep borehole heat exchangers of depths ranging from 600-3000 m. We applied the thermogeological parameters of three locations across Finland and tested two types of coaxial borehole heat exchangers to understand better the variables that affect heat production in low permeability crystalline rocks. For each depth, location, and heat collector type, we used a range of fluid flow rates to examine the correlation between thermal energy production and resulting outlet temperature. Our results indicate a trade-off between thermal energy production and outlet fluid temperature depending on the fluid flow rate, and that the vacuum-insulated tubing outperforms high-density polyethylene pipe in energy and temperature production. In addition, the results suggest that the local thermogeological factors impact heat production. Maximum energy production from a 600-m-deep well achieved 170 MWh/a, increasing to 330 MWh/a from a 1000-m-deep well, 980 MWh/a from a 2-km-deep well, and up to 1880 MWh/a from a 3-km-deep well. We demonstrate that understanding the interplay of the local geology, heat exchanger materials, and fluid circulation rates is necessary to maximize the potential of medium-deep geothermal boreholes as a reliable long-term baseload energy source.


2015 ◽  
Vol 76 ◽  
pp. 351-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristian Bär ◽  
Wolfram Rühaak ◽  
Bastian Welsch ◽  
Daniel Schulte ◽  
Sebastian Homuth ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 597 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomasz Śliwa ◽  
Michał Kruszewski ◽  
Aneta Sapińska-Śliwa ◽  
Mohsen Assadi

Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 754 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiewen Deng ◽  
Qingpeng Wei ◽  
Shi He ◽  
Mei Liang ◽  
Hui Zhang

Deep borehole heat exchangers (DBHEs) extract heat from the medium-depth geothermal energy with the depth of 2–3 km and provide high-temperature heat source for the medium-depth geothermal heat pump systems (MD-GHPs). This paper focuses on the heat transfer performance of DBHEs, where field tests and simulation are conducted to analyze the heat transfer process and the influence factors. Results identify that the heat transfer performance is greatly influenced by geothermal properties of the ground, thermal properties and depth of DBHEs and operation parameters, which could be classified into external factors, internal factors and synergic adjustment. In addition, the long-term operation effects are analyzed with the simulation, results show that with inlet water temperature setting at 20 °C and flow rate setting at 6.0 kg/s, the average outlet water temperature only drops 0.99 °C and the average heat extraction drops 9.5% after 20-years operation. Therefore, it demonstrates that the medium-depth geothermal energy can serve as the high-temperature heat source for heat pump systems stably and reliably. The results from this study can be potentially used to guide the system design and optimization of DBHEs.


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