Abstract
Low enthalpy geothermal energy is a renewable resource that is still
underexploited nowadays in relation to its potential for development in
society worldwide. Most of its applications have already been investigated,
such as heating and cooling of private and public buildings, road defrosting,
cooling of industrial processes, food drying systems or desalination.
Geothermal power development is a long, risky and expensive process. It
basically consists of successive development stages aimed at locating the
resources (exploration), confirming the power generating capacity of the
reservoir (confirmation) and building the power plant and associated
structures (site development). Different factors intervene in influencing the
length, difficulty and materials required for these phases, thereby affecting
their cost.
One of the major limitations related to the installation of low enthalpy
geothermal power plants regards the initial development steps that are risky
and the upfront capital costs that are huge.
Most of the total cost of geothermal power is related to the reimbursement of
invested capital and associated returns.
In order to increase the optimal efficiency of installations which use
groundwater as a geothermal resource, flow and heat transport dynamics in
aquifers need to be well characterized. Especially in fractured rock aquifers
these processes represent critical elements that are not well known.
Therefore there is a tendency to oversize geothermal plants.
In the literature there are very few studies on heat transport, especially on
fractured media.
This study is aimed at deepening the understanding of this topic through heat
transport experiments in fractured networks and their interpretation.
Heat transfer tests have been carried out on the experimental apparatus
previously employed to perform flow and tracer transport experiments, which
has been modified in order to analyze heat transport dynamics in a network of
fractures. In order to model the obtained thermal breakthrough curves, the
Explicit Network Model (ENM) has been used, which is based on an adaptation
of Tang's solution for the transport of the solutes in a semi-infinite single
fracture embedded in a porous matrix.
Parameter estimation, time moment analysis, tailing character and other
dimensionless parameters have permitted a better understanding of the
dynamics of heat transport and the efficiency of heat exchange between the
fractures and the matrix. The results have been compared with the previous
experimental studies on solute transport.
Citation
ID:
217569
Ref Key:
cherubini2017nonlinearlaboratory