The fundamental challenge for electricity generation by Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) is the creation of sufficient permeability in a fractured reservoir at depths of 4 km or more. This shall be achieved by hydraulic stimulation – in an efficient, reliable and safe way.
The research within task 1.2 focuses on three themes:
The Swiss Federal Energy Strategy 2050 calls for scientific research to support industry's endeavours to (1) generate electricity from geothermal energy and (2) develop deep geological sites for permanent, safe storage of CO2, such that gas-fired power stations may be operated in an environmentally sustainable way. At present, there are no proven sites for these technologies in Switzerland. This project will therefore support industry's first steps towards these aims, namely the assessment of geothermal and gas-storage resources, the exploration for promising drilling sites and the characterization of potential heat- and gas-storage reservoirs. The project will elaborate exploration guidelines and methodologies to lower the risk of failure of exploration drilling. |
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| Chef de projet au SED | |
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| Partenaires de recherche | Institute of Geological Sciences at the University of Bern, Geological Institute at ETHZ, Faculty of Geosciences and Environment at the University of Lausanne |
| Source de financement | National Research Programme 70 |
| Durée | October 2014 to September 2018 |
| Mots-clef | |
| Domaine de recherche | |
| Lien vers le site Internet du projet | |
The current suite of THMC models are limited because the wide range of timescales associated with the processes underlying fluid-injection in the earth result in numerically cumbersome calculations at insufficient resolution. The complex and coupled processes associated with fluid-injection (fracture, fluid flow, heat flow, and chemical reactions) require a new generation of numerical algorithms designed for High Performance Computing (HPC). A primary focus of the numerical modeling group at the University of Neuchatel is to develop the next generation of simulators that can model the nucleation, growth, and coalescence of numerical fractures that evolve in response to far-field stresses, and stress perturbations arising from poroelastic / thermoelastic stresses and in response to fracture network itself. This network provides the principal pathways for fluid flow, and thus heat flow, allowing simulations of the injection processes, and for studying the long-term viability of a geothermal resource. Our approach is design algorithms optimized for Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) clusters, with the aim of high-resolution and computationally fast simulations. |
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| Chef de projet au SED | |
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| Partenaires de recherche | University of Neuchâtel |
| Source de financement | University of Neuchâtel |
| Durée | November 2014 to October 2018 |
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| Domaine de recherche | |
The chair "Gaz Naturel" aims at reproducing the thermo-hydro-chemo-bio-mechanical THCBM coupled behaviour of the reservoir materials during CO2 injection and storage in all time scales, in particular the formulation of constitute model and of the mathematical/numercial model for the coupled behaviour. Its implementation in a FE code and the experimental investigations will be processed for the material characterization and validation of the numerical tool. |
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| Chef de projet au SED | |
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| Partenaires de recherche | EPFL, Gaznat SA, Holdigaz SA |
| Source de financement | Petrosvibri SA |
| Durée | 2012 to 2020 |
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| Domaine de recherche | |
Permeability is the decisive reservoir property for the economic success of geothermal operations as it determines the flow rates that can be achieved when circulating fluid to mine heat from the reservoir. However, at the depth of deep geothermal reservoir targets, permeability is typically too low for commercial circulation rates and therefore requires enhancement by (hydraulic) stimulation. There is currently no quantitative theory that can predict by how much reservoir permeability may be enhanced during stimulation at a given site. This uncertainty is one of the major investment risks in the future development of deep geothermal energy in Switzerland. In addition, seismicity induced by hydraulic stimulation is the biggest technical and societal acceptance risk. Our project develops and applies novel numerical simulation techniques for the quantification of permeability enhancement during hydraulic stimulation, its spatial evolution during reservoir development, and the seismicity-related processes of fault slip during stimulation. |
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| Chef de projet au SED | |
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| Partenaires de recherche | Institute of Geochemistry and Petrology at ETHZ, Department of Earth Sciences (D-ERDW) at ETHZ, Università della Svizzera italiana (USI), University of Neuchâtel |
| Source de financement | Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), National Research Programme 70 |
| Durée | November 2014 to October 2017 |
| Mots-clef | |
| Domaine de recherche | |
| Lien vers le site Internet du projet | |
GEOTHERM-2 conducts cross-disciplinary research towards the development of Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS). It represents the second phase of GEOTHERM (2009-2012), a comprehensive program of basic research on key aspects of Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS). GEOTHERM-2 conducts cross-disciplinary research targeted to the development of Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS). The research addresses aspects concerning the geomechanical characterization of reservoirs, the numerical simulation of a reservoir creation, the long term effects of geochemical reactions on permeability and heat extraction, the assessment and management of the induced seismicity risk, the social acceptance and comparative assessment of the risks inherent to an EGS project, and the analysis of geothermal energy usage in cities, with the case study of Lausanne. |
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| Chef de projet au SED | |
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| Partenaires de recherche | Swiss Seismological Service (SED) at ETHZ, Laboratory for Energy Systems Analysis (LEA) at PSI |
| Source de financement | Competence Center Environment and Sustainability (CCES) and Competence Center for Energy and Mobility (CCEM) at ETHZ, Swiss Federal Office of Energy (SFOE) |
| Durée | May 2013 to April 2016 |
| Mots-clef | |
| Domaine de recherche | |
| Lien vers le site Internet du projet | |
COTHERM started in 2012 as a synergistic collaboration with four sub-projects to advance our understanding of the fundamental geological, chemical, and physical processes governing the sub-surface structure and dynamics of geothermal systems. Our follow-up project will address fundamental questions regarding a new type of geothermal resources (so-called “supercritical resources”) that were recently discovered at Krafla Volcano, Iceland. Supercritical resources bear the potential to boost geothermal power production by up to an order of magnitude per well. |
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| Chef de projet au SED | |
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| Partenaires de recherche | Institute of Geochemistry and Petrology (IGP) at ETHZ, Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), University of Iceland, Iceland GeoSurvey (ISOR) |
| Source de financement | Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) Sinergia |
| Durée | September 2015 to August 2016 |
| Mots-clef | |
| Domaine de recherche | |
| Lien vers le site Internet du projet | |
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