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Supercritical fluids around magmatic intrusions: IDDP-1 at Krafla, Iceland.

Authors :
Heřmanská, Matylda
Stefánsson, Andri
Scott, Samuel
Source :
Geothermics. Mar2019, Vol. 78, p101-110. 10p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Highlights • Supercritical fluids form around magmatic intrusions from conductive heating of surrounding subcritical geothermal fluids. • Supercritical fluid formation leads to a quartz-dominated contact aureole. • Supercritical fluids have similar volatile contents as surrounding subcritical geothermal fluids. • Condensation of liquid from ascending supercritical fluids above the intrusion generates acid thermal fluids. Abstract High-enthalpy supercritical geothermal fluids were obtained from the IDDP-1 well at Krafla, Iceland, which had a discharge temperature of ∼440 °C and specific enthalpy of ∼3200 kJ kg−1. Utilization of such fluids may multiply power production from geothermal well fields. However, the origin of supercritical fluids in the roots of volcanic geothermal systems is poorly understood. Here, we propose that an important mechanism of such supercritical fluid formation is conductive heating of surrounding subcritical geothermal fluids near a shallow intrusion. Predictions from hydrologic and chemical models of supercritical fluid formation and ascent are compared with measured fluid compositions from the Krafla geothermal system. Supercritical fluids formed by close to isobaric heating of liquid geothermal groundwater display similar volatile concentrations (C, S, B, Cl, F) as the initial fluid. In contrast, the low concentrations of non-volatile elements (Si, Na, K, Ca, Mg, Al, Fe) in the supercritical fluid result from intensive, quartz-dominated mineral deposition near the magmatic intrusion during boiling of liquid to dryness. Liquid condensed out of ascending supercritical fluid has a low pH (∼2) due to the dissociation of volatile components like HCl. Such 'acid' geothermal fluids have been encountered in wells in the Krafla system. However, the chemical signatures of supercritical fluid ascent are likely to be overprinted by mixing of the acid fluids with cooler subcritical fluids, fluid-rock interaction, depressurization boiling and phase segregation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03756505
Volume :
78
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Geothermics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134204465
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geothermics.2018.11.002