4.5 Article

Numerical Modeling of the Effects of Pore Characteristics on the Electric Breakdown of Rock for Plasma Pulse Geo Drilling

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en15010250

Keywords

plasma pulse geo drilling; electropulse drilling; geothermal energy; plasma physics; micro-plasma modeling; partial discharge; electric breakdown; high-voltage pulses

Categories

Funding

  1. [28305.1 PFIW-IW]

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Drilling costs can be a significant portion of geothermal project investment, and reducing these costs through techniques like Plasma Pulse Geo Drilling (PPGD) can greatly decrease overall project expenses. This paper presents a numerical model to study how pore characteristics affect the efficiency of PPGD, which is a contactless drilling technique that uses high-voltage pulses to fracture rock without mechanical abrasion.
Drilling costs can be 80% of geothermal project investment, so decreasing these deep drilling costs substantially reduces overall project costs, contributing to less expensive geothermal electricity or heat generation. Plasma Pulse Geo Drilling (PPGD) is a contactless drilling technique that uses high-voltage pulses to fracture the rock without mechanical abrasion, which may reduce drilling costs by up to 90% of conventional mechanical rotary drilling costs. However, further development of PPGD requires a better understanding of the underlying fundamental physics, specifically the dielectric breakdown of rocks with pore fluids subjected to high-voltage pulses. This paper presents a numerical model to investigate the effects of the pore characteristics (i.e., pore fluid, shape, size, and pressure) on the occurrence of the local electric breakdown (i.e., plasma formation in the pore fluid) inside the granite pores and thus on PPGD efficiency. Investigated are: (i) two pore fluids, consisting of air (gas) or liquid water; (ii) three pore shapes, i.e., ellipses, circles, and squares; (iii) pore sizes ranging from 10 to 150 mu m; (iv) pore pressures ranging from 0.1 to 2.5 MPa. The study shows how the investigated pore characteristics affect the local electric breakdown and, consequently, the PPGD process.

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