Chapter
May 18, 2023

Prevention of Thermal Pollution of Groundwater near Open Loop Geothermal Energy Systems

Publication: World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2023

ABSTRACT

Open loop geothermal energy systems (GES) extract groundwater through an extraction well, pass the water through a heat exchanger to remove or add heat, then reinject the cooled or heated water into the aquifer. Because the reinjected water has a different temperature than the ambient groundwater, reinjection creates a thermal plume that travels downgradient and can be harmful to downstream water users or ecosystems. The heat from the thermal plume dissipates as the plume travels through the aquifer, so after sufficiently long distances have been traveled, the water has returned to the ambient temperature of the aquifer. Thus, the sites chosen for GES should be located sufficiently far from temperature-sensitive ecosystems. We propose the adjoint method for identifying allowable locations of GES. With the adjoint method, information is propagated upgradient from the location of the ecosystem, such that only one adjoint simulation is required to evaluate the appropriateness of any location as a site for GES. The application of the adjoint method in this context requires the assumption that the water extraction and reinjection have a minimal influence on the flow field. In this work, the errors introduced by that assumption are evaluated, and a correction is developed to reduce the errors introduced by that assumption. The approach is applied and tested for a field site in Finland, where the ambient groundwater velocity is very low and therefore the extraction and reinjection of water at the GES substantially alters the flow field.

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REFERENCES

Arola, T., Okkonen, J., and Jokisalo, J. (2016). Groundwater utilization for energy production in the Nordic environment: An energy simulation and hydrogeological modeling approach, Journal of Water Resource and Protection, 8, doi:https://doi.org/10.4236/jwarp.2016.86053.
Banks, D. (2009). Thermogeological assessment of open-loop well-doublet schemes: A review and synthesis of analytical approaches, Hydrogeology Journal, 17: 1149–1155.
Charbeneau, R. J. (2000). Groundwater Hydraulics and Pollutant Transport, Prentice-Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.
Harbaugh, A. W. (2005). MODFLOW-2005, the U.S. Geological Survey modular ground-water model -- the Ground-Water Flow Process: U.S. Geological Survey Techniques and Methods 6-A16.
Sommer, W., Valstar, J., Leusbrock, I., Grotenhuis, T., and Rijnaarts, H. (2015). Optimization and spatial pattern of large-scale aquifer thermal energy storage, Applied Energy, 137, doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2014.10.019.
Thorne, D., Langevin, C. D., and Sukop, M. C. (2006). Addition of simultaneous heat and solute transport and variable fluid viscosity to SEAWAT, Computers & Geosciences, 32, 1758–1768.
Zheng, C., and Wang, P. P. (1999). MT3DMS: A modular three-dimensional multispecies transport model for simulation of advection, dispersion, and chemical reaction of contaminants in groundwater systems: Documentation and User’s Guide, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Washington, D.C.

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Go to World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2023
World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2023
Pages: 140 - 150

History

Published online: May 18, 2023

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R. M. Neupauer, Ph.D., M.ASCE [email protected]
P.E.
1Dept. of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, Univ. of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO. Email: [email protected]
J. Okkonen, Ph.D. [email protected]
2Geological Survey of Finland, Espoo, Finland. Email: [email protected]
3Environmental Engineering Program, Univ. of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO. Email: [email protected]

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