4.3 Article

Modeling, simulation, and optimization of geothermal energy production from hot sedimentary aquifers

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL GEOSCIENCES
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 67-104

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10596-020-09989-8

Keywords

Porous and fractured geothermal reservoir modeling; Geothermal multi-well configurations; Finite element method; Thermo-hydraulic coupling; Optimization; Open-source software

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL
  2. Seed Grant of the Leibniz Mathematical Modeling and Simulation (MMS) Network
  3. German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy [BMWi - FKZ 0325787B]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Geothermal district heating development in Europe is gaining momentum, with a focus on sustainable reservoir exploitation through optimal positioning and spacing of multi-well systems. Numerical simulations show that smart multi-well arrangements can significantly increase energy production from deep geothermal reservoirs in sedimentary basins.
Geothermal district heating development has been gaining momentum in Europe with numerous deep geothermal installations and projects currently under development. With the increasing density of geothermal wells, questions related to the optimal and sustainable reservoir exploitation become more and more important. A quantitative understanding of the complex thermo-hydraulic interaction between tightly deployed geothermal wells in heterogeneous temperature and permeability fields is key for a maximum sustainable use of geothermal resources. Motivated by the geological settings of the Upper Jurassic aquifer in the Greater Munich region, we develop a computational model based on finite element analysis and gradient-free optimization to simulate groundwater flow and heat transport in hot sedimentary aquifers, and numerically investigate the optimal positioning and spacing of multi-well systems. Based on our numerical simulations, net energy production from deep geothermal reservoirs in sedimentary basins by smart geothermal multi-well arrangements provides significant amounts of energy to meet heat demand in highly urbanized regions. Our results show that taking into account heterogeneous permeability structures and a variable reservoir temperature may drastically affect the results in the optimal configuration. We demonstrate that the proposed numerical framework is able to efficiently handle generic geometrical and geological configurations, and can be thus flexibly used in the context of multi-variable optimization problems. Hence, this numerical framework can be used to assess the extractable geothermal energy from heterogeneous deep geothermal reservoirs by the optimized deployment of smart multi-well systems.

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