Title:

Adsorption Characteristics of Rocks from Vapor-Dominated Geothermal Reservoirs at The Geysers, CA

Authors:

C. Satik, M. Walters, R. N. Horne

Geo Location:

The Geysers, California

Conference:

Stanford Geothermal Workshop

Year:

1996

Session:

Adsorption/Stimulation

Language:

English

File Size:

949KB

View File:

Abstract:

This paper reports on a continuing experimental effort to characterize the adsorption behavior of rocks from The Geysers steam field in California. We show adsorption results obtained for 36 rock samples. All of the adsorption isotherms plotted on the same graph exhibit an envelope of isothenns. The minimum and the maximum values of the slope (or rate of adsorption) and of the magnitude within this envelope of isotherms belonged to the UOC-1 (felsite) and NCPA B-5 (serpentine) samples. The values of surface area and porosity, and pore size distribution for 19 of the samples indicated a very weak correlation with adsorption. An interpretation of the pore size distributions and the liquid saturation isotherms suggests that the change in the slope and the magnitude of the adsorption isotherms within the envelope is controlled primarily by the physical adsorption mechanism instead of capillary condensation. Grain-size and framework grain to matrix ratio are found to be insufficient to characterize this adsorption behavior. An accurate identification of the mineralogy of the samples will be essential to complete this analysis.


ec2-3-17-6-75.us-east-2.compute.amazonaws.com, you have accessed 0 records today.

Press the Back button in your browser, or search again.

Copyright 1996, Stanford Geothermal Program: Readers who download papers from this site should honor the copyright of the original authors and may not copy or distribute the work further without the permission of the original publisher.


Attend the nwxt Stanford Geothermal Workshop, click here for details.

Accessed by: ec2-3-17-6-75.us-east-2.compute.amazonaws.com (3.17.6.75)
Accessed: Tuesday 23rd of April 2024 06:18:38 PM