Utilizing supercritical geothermal systems: a review of past ventures and ongoing research activities

Supercritical geothermal systems are very high-temperature geothermal systems that are located at depths near or below the brittle–ductile transition zone in the crust where the reservoir fluid is assumed to be in the supercritical state, that is for pure water, temperature and pressure are, respect...

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Main Authors: Reinsch, T, Dobson, P, Asanuma, H, Huenges, E, Poletto, F, Sanjuan, B
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9j59j0gn
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt9j59j0gn 2023-05-15T16:48:49+02:00 Utilizing supercritical geothermal systems: a review of past ventures and ongoing research activities Reinsch, T Dobson, P Asanuma, H Huenges, E Poletto, F Sanjuan, B 16 2017-12-01 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9j59j0gn unknown eScholarship, University of California qt9j59j0gn https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9j59j0gn public Geothermal Energy, vol 5, iss 1 Supercritical geothermal systems Brittle-ductile transition International collaboration article 2017 ftcdlib 2021-06-20T14:23:16Z Supercritical geothermal systems are very high-temperature geothermal systems that are located at depths near or below the brittle–ductile transition zone in the crust where the reservoir fluid is assumed to be in the supercritical state, that is for pure water, temperature and pressure are, respectively, in excess of 374°C and 221bar. These systems have garnered attention in recent years as a possible type of unconventional geothermal resource due to their very high enthalpy fluids. Supercritical conditions are often found at the roots of volcanic-hosted hydrothermal systems. More than 25 deep wells drilled in geothermal fields such as The Geysers, Salton Sea, and on Hawaii (USA), Kakkonda (Japan), Larderello (Italy), Krafla (Iceland), Los Humeros (Mexico), and Menengai (Kenya) have encountered temperatures in excess of 374°C, and in some cases have encountered magma. Although fluid entries were documented for some of these wells, it remains an open question if permeability can be maintained at high enthalpy conditions. The IDDP-1 well at Krafla encountered magma, and ended up producing very high enthalpy fluids; however, these fluids were very corrosive and abrasive. Innovative drilling and well completion techniques are therefore needed to deal with the extreme temperatures and aggressive fluid chemistry compositions of these systems. New efforts are underway in Japan (northern Honshu), Italy (Larderello), Iceland (Reykjanes peninsula and Krafla), Mexico (Los Humeros), USA (Newberry), and New Zealand (Taupo Volcanic Zone) to investigate supercritical systems. Here, we review past studies, describe current research efforts, and outline the challenges and potential opportunities that these systems provide for international collaboration to ultimately utilize supercritical geothermal systems as a geothermal energy resource. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland University of California: eScholarship Krafla ENVELOPE(-16.747,-16.747,65.713,65.713) New Zealand Reykjanes ENVELOPE(-22.250,-22.250,65.467,65.467)
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Supercritical geothermal systems
Brittle-ductile transition
International collaboration
spellingShingle Supercritical geothermal systems
Brittle-ductile transition
International collaboration
Reinsch, T
Dobson, P
Asanuma, H
Huenges, E
Poletto, F
Sanjuan, B
Utilizing supercritical geothermal systems: a review of past ventures and ongoing research activities
topic_facet Supercritical geothermal systems
Brittle-ductile transition
International collaboration
description Supercritical geothermal systems are very high-temperature geothermal systems that are located at depths near or below the brittle–ductile transition zone in the crust where the reservoir fluid is assumed to be in the supercritical state, that is for pure water, temperature and pressure are, respectively, in excess of 374°C and 221bar. These systems have garnered attention in recent years as a possible type of unconventional geothermal resource due to their very high enthalpy fluids. Supercritical conditions are often found at the roots of volcanic-hosted hydrothermal systems. More than 25 deep wells drilled in geothermal fields such as The Geysers, Salton Sea, and on Hawaii (USA), Kakkonda (Japan), Larderello (Italy), Krafla (Iceland), Los Humeros (Mexico), and Menengai (Kenya) have encountered temperatures in excess of 374°C, and in some cases have encountered magma. Although fluid entries were documented for some of these wells, it remains an open question if permeability can be maintained at high enthalpy conditions. The IDDP-1 well at Krafla encountered magma, and ended up producing very high enthalpy fluids; however, these fluids were very corrosive and abrasive. Innovative drilling and well completion techniques are therefore needed to deal with the extreme temperatures and aggressive fluid chemistry compositions of these systems. New efforts are underway in Japan (northern Honshu), Italy (Larderello), Iceland (Reykjanes peninsula and Krafla), Mexico (Los Humeros), USA (Newberry), and New Zealand (Taupo Volcanic Zone) to investigate supercritical systems. Here, we review past studies, describe current research efforts, and outline the challenges and potential opportunities that these systems provide for international collaboration to ultimately utilize supercritical geothermal systems as a geothermal energy resource.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Reinsch, T
Dobson, P
Asanuma, H
Huenges, E
Poletto, F
Sanjuan, B
author_facet Reinsch, T
Dobson, P
Asanuma, H
Huenges, E
Poletto, F
Sanjuan, B
author_sort Reinsch, T
title Utilizing supercritical geothermal systems: a review of past ventures and ongoing research activities
title_short Utilizing supercritical geothermal systems: a review of past ventures and ongoing research activities
title_full Utilizing supercritical geothermal systems: a review of past ventures and ongoing research activities
title_fullStr Utilizing supercritical geothermal systems: a review of past ventures and ongoing research activities
title_full_unstemmed Utilizing supercritical geothermal systems: a review of past ventures and ongoing research activities
title_sort utilizing supercritical geothermal systems: a review of past ventures and ongoing research activities
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2017
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9j59j0gn
op_coverage 16
long_lat ENVELOPE(-16.747,-16.747,65.713,65.713)
ENVELOPE(-22.250,-22.250,65.467,65.467)
geographic Krafla
New Zealand
Reykjanes
geographic_facet Krafla
New Zealand
Reykjanes
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Geothermal Energy, vol 5, iss 1
op_relation qt9j59j0gn
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9j59j0gn
op_rights public
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