scholarly journals Deep geothermal groundwater flow in the Seferihisar-Balçova area, Turkey: results from transient numerical simulations of coupled fluid flow and heat transport processes

Geofluids ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 388-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. MAGRI ◽  
T. AKAR ◽  
U. GEMICI ◽  
A. PEKDEGER
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nora Koltzer ◽  
Maximilian Frick ◽  
Magdalena Scheck-Wenderoth ◽  
Björn Lewerenz ◽  
Kristian Bär ◽  
...  

<p>For the sustainable utilization of deep geothermal resources it is essential to predict the exploitable potential thermal energy from the subsurface. One main parameter influencing the geothermal potential is the reservoir temperature that may vary locally or regionally in response to fluid flow and heat transport processes.</p><p>This study aims at combining highly complex 3D thermo-hydraulic numerical simulations of heat transport and fluid flow with predictions of the geothermal potential for the application case of a hydrothermal doublet. Quantifying the influences of conductive, advective and convective heat transport mechanisms on the thermal field and moreover on the predicted heating power requires fundamental numerical investigations. We use the Federal State of Hesse in Germany as study area where heat transport processes have been quantified in recently published studies. There, the heterogeneous geology consists of outcropping Variscan Crust and up to 3.8 km and 1.8 km thick sedimentary deposits of the Upper Rhine Graben and the Hessian Depression, respectively. This geological complexity is expressed by areas of different hydraulic and thermal configurations: in the flat, but tectonically active Upper Rhine Graben high heat flow from below the graben sediments is in contrast to the variable topography of the Hessian Depression with low heat input from the Rhenohercynian Basement.</p><p>The heating power in the three reservoir units (I) Cenozoic, (II) Buntsandstein and (III) Rotliegend is only predicted to be high in the Upper Rhine Graben. There the reservoir temperature is high enough and varies between 50 °C in the convective thermal model of the Cenozoic reservoir and 170 °C in the conductive thermal model of the Buntsandstein reservoir. Predicted low temperatures in the Hessian Depression lead to negligible low heating power, but as production mass flux is above ~6 kg s<sup>-1 </sup>investigations should continue to assess the geothermal potential for other applications like seasonal energy storage or low enthalpy geothermal utilization.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 436-448 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masoumeh Shojae Ghias ◽  
René Therrien ◽  
John Molson ◽  
Jean-Michel Lemieux

Numerical simulations of coupled groundwater flow and heat transport are used to address how hydrogeological conditions can affect permafrost dynamics. The simulations are based on a two-dimensional vertical-plane conceptual model of a study site at the Iqaluit Airport, Nunavut, Canada, which includes a 50 m deep permafrost terrain with a shallow active layer, overlain by a paved taxiway with winter snow-covered embankments. Coupled groundwater flow and advective–conductive heat transport with freeze–thaw dynamics, temperature-dependent pore-water freezing functions, and latent heat are included in the model. The simulation results show that a smooth (low-slope) freezing function with a higher residual unfrozen moisture content produced a deeper thaw front compared to that using a steeper freezing function, generating a maximum increase in the depth to permafrost of 17.5 m after 268 years. Permafrost thaw rates in high-permeability zones within a heterogeneous system were also relatively higher compared to an otherwise equivalent homogeneous soil, resulting in a maximum increase of 2.6 m in the depth to permafrost after 238 years. As recharge water cools while flowing along the upgradient permafrost table, advectively driven heat transport is paradoxically shown to temporarily increase the height of the permafrost table in downgradient areas.


2000 ◽  
Vol 105 (B9) ◽  
pp. 21371-21385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert N. Harris ◽  
Grant Garven ◽  
Jennifer Georgen ◽  
Marcia K. McNutt ◽  
Lizet Christiansen ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andres Gonzalez ◽  
Zoya Heidari ◽  
Olivier Lopez

Abstract Depositional mechanisms of sediments and post-depositional process often cause spatial variation and heterogeneity in rock fabric, which can impact the directional dependency of petrophysical, electrical, and mechanical properties. Quantification of the directional dependency of the aforementioned properties is fundamental for the appropriate characterization of hydrocarbon-bearing reservoirs. Anisotropy quantification can be accomplished through numerical simulations of physical phenomena such as fluid flow, gas diffusion, and electric current conduction in porous media using multi-scale image data. Typically, the outcome of these simulations is a transport property (e.g., permeability). However, it is also possible to quantify the tortuosity of the media used as simulation domain, which is a fundamental descriptor of the microstructure of the rock. The objectives of this paper are (a) to quantify tortuosity anisotropy of porous media using multi-scale image data (i.e., whole-core CT-scan and micro-CT-scan image stacks) through simulation of electrical potential distribution, diffusion, and fluid flow, and (b) to compare electrical, diffusional, and hydraulic tortuosity. First, we pre-process the images (i.e., CT-scan images) to remove non-rock material visual elements (e.g., core barrel). Then, we perform image analysis to identify different phases in the raw images. Then, we proceed with the numerical simulations of electric potential distribution. The simulation results are utilized as inputs for a streamline algorithm and subsequent direction-dependent electrical tortuosity estimation. Next, we conduct numerical simulation of diffusion using a random walk algorithm. The distance covered by each walker in each cartesian direction is used to compute the direction-dependent diffusional tortuosity. Finally, we conduct fluid-flow simulations to obtain the velocity distribution and compute the direction-dependent hydraulic tortuosity. The simulations are conducted in the most continuous phase of the segmented whole-core CT-scan image stacks and in the segmented pore-space of the micro-CT-scan image stacks. Finally, the direction-dependent tortuosity values obtained with each technique are employed to assess the anisotropy of the evaluated samples. We tested the introduced workflow on dual energy whole-core CT-scan images and on smaller scale micro-CT-scan images. The whole-core CT-scan images were obtained from a siliciclastic depth interval, composed mainly by spiculites. Micro-CT-scan images we obtained from Berea Sandstone and Austin Chalk formations. We observed numerical differences in the estimates of direction-dependent electrical, diffusional, and hydraulic tortuosity for both types of image data employed. The highest numerical differences were observed when comparing electrical and hydraulic tortuosity with diffusional tortuosity. The observed differences were significant specially in anisotropic samples. The documented comparison provides useful insight in the selection process of techniques for estimation of tortuosity. The use of core-scale image data in the proposed workflow provides semi-continuous estimates of tortuosity and tortuosity anisotropy which is typically not attainable when using pore-scale images. Additionally, the semi-continuous nature of the tortuosity and tortuosity anisotropy estimates in whole-core CT-scan image data provides an excellent tool for the selection of core plugs coring locations.


2018 ◽  
Vol 114 ◽  
pp. 196-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Grenier ◽  
Hauke Anbergen ◽  
Victor Bense ◽  
Quentin Chanzy ◽  
Ethan Coon ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document