4.7 Article

Thermal Drawdown-Induced Flow Channeling in Fractured Geothermal Reservoirs

Journal

ROCK MECHANICS AND ROCK ENGINEERING
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages 1001-1024

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00603-015-0776-0

Keywords

Geothermal; Enhanced geothermal system; Hot wet rock; Thermal breakthrough; Flow channeling; THM model

Funding

  1. Geothermal Technologies Office of the US Department of Energy
  2. LLNL LDRD project Creating Optimal Fracture Networks'' [11-SI-006]
  3. US Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]

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We investigate the flow-channeling phenomenon caused by thermal drawdown in fractured geothermal reservoirs. A discrete fracture network-based, fully coupled thermal-hydrological-mechanical simulator is used to study the interactions between fluid flow, temperature change, and the associated rock deformation. The responses of a number of randomly generated 2D fracture networks that represent a variety of reservoir characteristics are simulated with various injection-production well distances. We find that flow channeling, namely flow concentration in cooled zones, is the inevitable fate of all the scenarios evaluated. We also identify a secondary geomechanical mechanism caused by the anisotropy in thermal stress that counteracts the primary mechanism of flow channeling. This new mechanism tends, to some extent, to result in a more diffuse flow distribution, although it is generally not strong enough to completely reverse flow channeling. We find that fracture intensity substantially affects the overall hydraulic impedance of the reservoir but increasing fracture intensity generally does not improve heat production performance. Increasing the injection-production well separation appears to be an effective means to prolong the production life of a reservoir.

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