Modeling the geochemical evolution of fluids in geothermal wells and its implication for sustainable energy production

Autor: Hulusi Kargı, Taylan Akın
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Calcite scaling
Turkey
0211 other engineering and technologies
Separator (oil production)
Geothermal fields
02 engineering and technology
010502 geochemistry & geophysics
01 natural sciences
Kızıldere
chemistry.chemical_compound
Injection (oil wells)
Petrology
Geothermal gradient
Calcite
geochemical method
Geology
Silica
Geochemical evolution
Geochemical interpretation
Volumetric flow rate
Denizli [Turkey]
geothermal energy
Carbonate
Geochemical modeling
Geothermal wells
CO2
Geothermal
Pyroxene
Energy conservation
alternative energy
Kizildere Geothermal Field
Boiling
021108 energy
Geochemical characteristic
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Renewable Energy
Sustainability and the Environment

PHREEQC
Serpentine
carbon dioxide
modeling
Water injection
Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Geochemistry
chemistry
Oil field equipment
Silicate minerals
geothermal system
Physical and chemical properties
Popis: In practice, geothermal fluids are sampled under surface conditions for geochemical interpretations. However, the physical and chemical properties of geothermal waters change as the waters flow from a reservoir to the surface along the well due to processes such as mineral scaling, degassing, cooling and boiling. The objective of this study is to estimate the geochemical characteristics of water-dominated geothermal reservoirs and to model the geochemical evolution of fluids in geothermal wellbores to provide information on the parameters that contribute to sustainable energy production. A workflow was developed for commonly used non-commercial software PHREEQC and geochemical modeling approach was demonstrated for fluid samples of four geothermal wells located in the Kizildere geothermal field (SW Turkey). According to the modeled reservoir chemistry, the reservoir type in the field is water-dominated, and the sum of partial pressures of dissolved CO2 and steam in the reservoir varies from 135–160 atm. First gas bubble depths, where an inhibitor should be injected below, were calculated for relevant flow rates of the wells as 1597, 1751, 1884 and 1579 meters. The calculated initial total calcium concentrations in the reservoir are 3.67, 5.93, 5.04 and 6.01 mg/kg. Besides calcite, 16 minerals including silica polymorphs, amphibole, serpentine, pyroxene, carbonate and phyllosilicate groups, are gained precipitation tendency under the separator conditions. To provide sustainable energy production by preventing mineral scaling in reservoirs and wells, the required parameters such as; appropriate depth for inhibitor injection in wellbore, type and initial concentration of scaling minerals, total dissolved gas and steam pressures in reservoir to limit maximum flowrate can be determined for any water-dominated geothermal field by using the proposed workflow in the PHREEQC software. © 2018 Elsevier Ltd
Databáze: OpenAIRE