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Investigation of permeability alteration of fractured limestone reservoir due to geothermal heat extraction using three-dimensional thermo-hydro-chemical (THC) model
- Source :
- Geothermics. 51:46-62
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2014.
-
Abstract
- Heat extraction by cold water circulation disturbs the thermo-chemical equilibrium of a geothermal reservoir, activating the dissolution/precipitation of minerals in the fractures. Calcite being a more reactive mineral than other rock minerals composing the earth curst, we investigate the permeability alteration during geothermal heat production from carbonate reservoirs. In this study the simulations are performed using the code FEHM with coupled thermo-hydro-chemical (THC) capabilities for a three dimensional domain. The computational domain consists of a single fracture connecting the injection and production wells. For reactive alteration of aperture, the model considers that the kinetics of dissolution/precipitation is coupled to the equilibrium interactions among the aqueous species/ions. The reaction rate predominantly depends on the temperature dependent solubility and advective-dispersive solute transport in the fracture. Due to the nonuniform flow fields resulting from injection and production, the coupled thermo-hydro-chemical processes initiate significant variation of the aperture alteration rate over the fracture. We have considered different operating conditions such as different mass injection rate, injection temperature and concentration of minerals. Our simulations show that dissolution and precipitation can occur simultaneously at different locations in fracture. Furthermore the reaction rate varies with time and the reaction rate can also switch between dissolution and precipitation. To illustrate this interesting behavior, the variations of shape and size of zero reaction rate contours with time are shown. An interesting outcome is a non-monotonic evolution of the overall transmissivity between the wells. The alteration of overall transmissivity largely depends on the concentration of mineral in the injected water with respect to the solubility at the initial fracture temperature. For both dissolution and precipitation controlled cases, the rapid changes in transmissivity provide challenges for maintaining circulation of water at constant mass flow rate. � 2013 Elsevier Ltd.
- Subjects :
- Calcite
Aperture alteration
Dissolution/precipitation
Geothermal reservoir
Reactive transport
Renewable energies
Dissolution
Extraction
Fracture
Geothermal fields
Geothermal heating
Petroleum reservoir engineering
Reaction rates
Reservoirs (water)
Solubility
Solute transport
Three dimensional
Water injection
Minerals
alternative energy
dissolution
fractured medium
geothermal system
heat production
limestone
permeability
precipitation (chemistry)
reaction kinetics
renewable resource
solute transport
thermal alteration
three-dimensional modeling
FEHM
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Mineralogy
Geology
Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Reaction rate
Permeability (earth sciences)
chemistry.chemical_compound
chemistry
Mass flow rate
Carbonate
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 03756505
- Volume :
- 51
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Geothermics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4f83d62e1e2512f808e77cc8c19d0d04