SUBSURFACE HEAT TRANSPORT SIMULATION WITH PERIODIC SURFACE TEMPERATURE SIGNALS AND GROUNDWATER FLOW

Author(s):  
Yaqi Luo ◽  
◽  
Yu-Feng Forrest Lin ◽  
Yu-Feng Forrest Lin ◽  
Praveen Kumar ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 114 ◽  
pp. 196-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Grenier ◽  
Hauke Anbergen ◽  
Victor Bense ◽  
Quentin Chanzy ◽  
Ethan Coon ◽  
...  

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (19) ◽  
pp. 6241
Author(s):  
Manon Bulté ◽  
Thierry Duren ◽  
Olivier Bouhon ◽  
Estelle Petitclerc ◽  
Mathieu Agniel ◽  
...  

A numerical model was built using FEFLOW® to simulate groundwater flow and heat transport in a confined aquifer in Brussels where two Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage (ATES) systems were installed. These systems are operating in adjacent buildings and exploit the same aquifer made up of mixed sandy and silty sublayers. The model was calibrated for groundwater flow and partially for heat transport. Several scenarios were considered to determine if the two ATES systems were interfering. The results showed that a significant imbalance between the injection of warm and cold water in the first installed ATES system led to the occurrence of a heat plume spreading more and more over the years. This plume eventually reached the cold wells of the same installation. The temperature, therefore, increased in warm and cold wells and the efficiency of the building’s cooling system decreased. When the second ATES system began to be operational, the simulated results showed that, even if the heat plumes of the two systems had come into contact, the influence of the second system on the first one was negligible during the first two years of joint operation. For a longer modeled period, simulated results pointed out that the joint operation of the two ATES systems was not adapted to balance, in the long term, the quantity of warm and cold water injected in the aquifer. The groundwater temperature would rise inexorably in the warm and cold wells of both systems. The heat plumes would spread more and more over the years at the expense of the efficiency of both systems, especially concerning building’s cooling with stored cold groundwater.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 805-805
Author(s):  
Wei-shi Wang ◽  
Sascha E. Oswald ◽  
Thomas Gräff ◽  
Hermann-Josef Lensing ◽  
Tie Liu ◽  
...  

The thermal stability of an exothermic chemically reacting slab with time-periodic surface temperature variation is examined. It is shown, on the basis of a good approximation due to Boddington, Gray and Walker, that the behaviour depends on the solutions of an ordinary differential equation of first order. The equation contains a modified amplitude, for small values of which it can be reduced to a particular form of Hill’s equation. Critical values of the Frank-Kamenetskii parameter, as a function of the amplitude ϵ and frequency ω of the surface temperature oscillations, are derived from the latter equation. For ω = 2π and 0 ≼ ϵ ≼ 2 the values are in good agreement with previously calculated ones.


2011 ◽  
Vol 24 (13) ◽  
pp. 3239-3256 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Hugo Lambert ◽  
Mark J. Webb ◽  
Manoj M. Joshi

Abstract Previous work has demonstrated that observed and modeled climates show a near-time-invariant ratio of mean land to mean ocean surface temperature change under transient and equilibrium global warming. This study confirms this in a range of atmospheric models coupled to perturbed sea surface temperatures (SSTs), slab (thermodynamics only) oceans, and a fully coupled ocean. Away from equilibrium, it is found that the atmospheric processes that maintain the ratio cause a land-to-ocean heat transport anomaly that can be approximated using a two-box energy balance model. When climate is forced by increasing atmospheric CO2 concentration, the heat transport anomaly moves heat from land to ocean, constraining the land to warm in step with the ocean surface, despite the small heat capacity of the land. The heat transport anomaly is strongly related to the top-of-atmosphere radiative flux imbalance, and hence it tends to a small value as equilibrium is approached. In contrast, when climate is forced by prescribing changes in SSTs, the heat transport anomaly replaces “missing” radiative forcing over land by moving heat from ocean to land, warming the land surface. The heat transport anomaly remains substantial in steady state. These results are consistent with earlier studies that found that both land and ocean surface temperature changes may be approximated as local responses to global mean radiative forcing. The modeled heat transport anomaly has large impacts on surface heat fluxes but small impacts on precipitation, circulation, and cloud radiative forcing compared with the impacts of surface temperature change. No substantial nonlinearities are found in these atmospheric variables when the effects of forcing and surface temperature change are added.


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