A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings

The geothermal energy industry is facing several challenges related to heat recovery efficiency and economic feasibility. Research on superheated and supercritical geothermal systems is progressing in Europe, triggered by the Iceland Deep Drilling project (IDDP) and the DESCRAMBLE project in Italy....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Renaud, Theo, Verdin, Patrick, Falcone, Gioia
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/190960/
http://europeangeothermalcongress.eu/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/156.pdf
id ftuglasgow:oai:eprints.gla.ac.uk:190960
record_format openpolar
spelling ftuglasgow:oai:eprints.gla.ac.uk:190960 2023-05-15T16:48:45+02:00 A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings Renaud, Theo Verdin, Patrick Falcone, Gioia 2019 http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/190960/ http://europeangeothermalcongress.eu/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/156.pdf unknown Renaud, T., Verdin, P. and Falcone, G. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/46939.html> (2019) A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings. In: European Geothermal Congress 2019, The Hague, The Netherlands, 11-14 Jun 2019 Conference Proceedings PeerReviewed 2019 ftuglasgow 2020-01-10T01:56:54Z The geothermal energy industry is facing several challenges related to heat recovery efficiency and economic feasibility. Research on superheated and supercritical geothermal systems is progressing in Europe, triggered by the Iceland Deep Drilling project (IDDP) and the DESCRAMBLE project in Italy. In Iceland, the IDDP-1 well, which reached a magma intrusion at a depth of 2100 m, raised new opportunities to untap the geothermal potential near shallow magmatic intrusions. Given their highly corrosive nature, geothermal fluids weaken the wellbore’s integrity during conventional geothermal production. Closed-loop Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers (DBHE) that do not require fluid exchange between the subsurface and the wells represent a strategic alternative for recovering heat from these unconventional geothermal resources, while minimizing the risk of in-situ reservoir damage. The thermal influence and heat recovery associated with a hypothetical DBHE drilled into the IDDP geological site, were investigated via Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), simulating 30 years of production. Two wellbore designs were considered, based on simplified geological properties from the IDDP-1 well description. The results show that, during the first year of production, the output temperature is function of the working fluid velocity before reaching pseudo-steady state conditions. The cooling perturbation near the bottom hole is shown to grow radially from 10 to 40 m between 1 and 10 years of production, and the output power calculated reaches up to 1.2 MWth for a single well. Based on assumptions on well-well distance, the predicted output from a single DBHE is then extrapolated to field scale for comparison with the short-term flow potential shown by the original IDDP-1 well. The significantly lower technical risks of a closed-loop DBHE system might outweigh the lower thermal output per well; this is however subject to full economic analysis. Conference Object Iceland University of Glasgow: Enlighten - Publications
institution Open Polar
collection University of Glasgow: Enlighten - Publications
op_collection_id ftuglasgow
language unknown
description The geothermal energy industry is facing several challenges related to heat recovery efficiency and economic feasibility. Research on superheated and supercritical geothermal systems is progressing in Europe, triggered by the Iceland Deep Drilling project (IDDP) and the DESCRAMBLE project in Italy. In Iceland, the IDDP-1 well, which reached a magma intrusion at a depth of 2100 m, raised new opportunities to untap the geothermal potential near shallow magmatic intrusions. Given their highly corrosive nature, geothermal fluids weaken the wellbore’s integrity during conventional geothermal production. Closed-loop Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers (DBHE) that do not require fluid exchange between the subsurface and the wells represent a strategic alternative for recovering heat from these unconventional geothermal resources, while minimizing the risk of in-situ reservoir damage. The thermal influence and heat recovery associated with a hypothetical DBHE drilled into the IDDP geological site, were investigated via Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), simulating 30 years of production. Two wellbore designs were considered, based on simplified geological properties from the IDDP-1 well description. The results show that, during the first year of production, the output temperature is function of the working fluid velocity before reaching pseudo-steady state conditions. The cooling perturbation near the bottom hole is shown to grow radially from 10 to 40 m between 1 and 10 years of production, and the output power calculated reaches up to 1.2 MWth for a single well. Based on assumptions on well-well distance, the predicted output from a single DBHE is then extrapolated to field scale for comparison with the short-term flow potential shown by the original IDDP-1 well. The significantly lower technical risks of a closed-loop DBHE system might outweigh the lower thermal output per well; this is however subject to full economic analysis.
format Conference Object
author Renaud, Theo
Verdin, Patrick
Falcone, Gioia
spellingShingle Renaud, Theo
Verdin, Patrick
Falcone, Gioia
A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings
author_facet Renaud, Theo
Verdin, Patrick
Falcone, Gioia
author_sort Renaud, Theo
title A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings
title_short A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings
title_full A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings
title_fullStr A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings
title_full_unstemmed A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings
title_sort numerical study of deep borehole heat exchangers efficiency in unconventional geothermal settings
publishDate 2019
url http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/190960/
http://europeangeothermalcongress.eu/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/156.pdf
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Renaud, T., Verdin, P. and Falcone, G. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/46939.html> (2019) A Numerical Study of Deep Borehole Heat Exchangers Efficiency in Unconventional Geothermal Settings. In: European Geothermal Congress 2019, The Hague, The Netherlands, 11-14 Jun 2019
_version_ 1766038841648480256