Influence of Reservoir Convection on Heat Extraction with Closed-Loop Geothermal Systems

Raquel Hakes, Radoslav Bozinoski, Koenraad Beckers, Adam Ketchum

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaper

1 Scopus Citations

Abstract

Over the past few years, advancements in closed-loop geothermal systems (CLGS), also called advanced geothermal systems (AGS), have sparked a renewed interest in these types of designs. CLGS have certain advantages over traditional and enhanced geothermal systems (EGS), including not requiring in-situ reservoir permeability, conservation of the circulating fluid, and allowing for different fluids, including working fluids directly driving a turbine at the surface. CLGS may be attractive in environments where water resources are limited, rock contaminants must be avoided, and stimulation treatments are not available (e.g., due to regulatory or technical reasons). Despite these advantages, CLGS have some challenges, including limited surface area for heat transfer and requiring long wellbores and laterals to obtain multi-MW output in conduction-only reservoirs. CLGS have been investigated in conduction-only systems. In this paper, we explore the impact of both forced and natural convection on the levels of heat extraction with a CLGS deployed in a hot wet rock reservoir. We bound potential benefits of convection by investigating liquid reservoirs over a range of natural and forced convective coefficients. Additionally, we investigate the effects of permeability, porosity, and geothermal temperature gradient in the reservoir on CLGS outputs. Reservoir simulations indicate that reservoir permeabilities of at least ~100 mD are required for natural convection to increase the heat output with respect to a conduction-only scenario. The impact increases with increasing reservoir temperature. When subject to a forced convection flow field, Darcy velocities of at least 10-7 m/s are required to obtain an increase in heat output.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages56-71
Number of pages16
StatePublished - 2025
EventGeothermal Rising Conference - Waikoloa, Hawaii
Duration: 27 Oct 202430 Oct 2024

Conference

ConferenceGeothermal Rising Conference
CityWaikoloa, Hawaii
Period27/10/2430/10/24

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/CP-5700-90916

Keywords

  • advanced geothermal systems
  • closed-loop geothermal
  • next-generation geothermal
  • reservoir convection
  • reservoir simulations

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Influence of Reservoir Convection on Heat Extraction with Closed-Loop Geothermal Systems'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this