Abstract
Novel, direct-energy drilling technologies such as electro-pulse boring, have the potential to significantly increase the speed and depth of geothermal drilling but have not achieved widespread adoption due to several economic and technical barriers. One major challenge is that these drilling systems require electric power downhole. The current practice is to supply power to the drill string components by running electric cables down the geothermal well, but at the targeted well depths, this practice is cost-inhibitive, inefficient in terms of power consumption, and adds an additional failure point with the long cabling going through a highly corrosive, high-temperature environment. A solution to this problem is to develop high-temperature electric generator technology that can generate the required power downhole. Such a generator must also operate with high efficiency at the target downhole ambient temperature of 250 degrees C. In this paper, we investigate the various design considerations for this concept and subsequently design the downhole electric generator using a multi-objective design optimization approach. Through electromagnetic-, thermal- and short-circuit fault condition analysis, it is demonstrated that the optimized downhole electric generator concept presented in this paper can meet the performance requirements within this extreme drilling environment. Most remarkably, it is shown that a generator efficiency of 90% is achieved. To validate the results presented in this paper, a prototype generator is built and its performance is measured at 250 degrees C using a test bench uniquely developed for this application.
Original language | American English |
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Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Renewable Energy |
Volume | 252 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2025 |
NREL Publication Number
- NREL/JA-5700-89927
Keywords
- electro-pulse boring
- geothermal energy
- high temperature
- permanent magnet generator