Title:

Permeability of Basalt Through the Brittle-Ductile Transition, Implications for Superhot Rock Geothermal

Authors:

Gabriel MEYER, Geoffrey GARRISON, Marie VIOLAY

Key Words:

Newberry, superhot rock, enhanced geothermal systems, ductile deformation

Conference:

Stanford Geothermal Workshop

Year:

2022

Session:

Enhanced Geothermal Systems

Language:

English

Paper Number:

Meyer

File Size:

779 KB

View File:

Abstract:

Superhot Rock (SHR) geothermal projects (e.g., Japan Beyond-Brittle Project, Iceland Deep Drilling Project, and Newberry Volcano) seek to extract heat from geothermal reservoirs where water reaches a supercritical state (≥ 400 °C). Exploiting such a resource could multiply the electrical power delivered by geothermal wells by almost an order of magnitude. However, SHR reservoirs are in semi-brittle to ductile rocks where fluid flow, porosity, permeability, and rock mechanics are still poorly understood. The Newberry SHR project has engaged EPFL Lausanne (CH) to conduct experiments at their brand-new, internally heated, gas-confining triaxial apparatus to deform reservoir-type samples under realistic SHR temperature, pressure, and strain rate conditions. Deep well core samples (40 x 20 mm) of andesitic basalts (porosities of 8–10%) from Newberry Volcano were subjected to increasing confinement pressure (25–100 MPa) and temperature (20–500 °C) while continuously recording gas permeability via harmonic permeability. Additionally, triaxial deformation experiments were done at strain rates of 10-6, confinement up to 100 MPa, temperature up to 500 °C, and up to 8% strain while recording permeability. Samples were ductile (e.g., no localization of strain) at relatively low pressure–low temperature conditions (100 MPa, 200 °C). Moreover, permeability in samples subjected to hydrostatic conditions rapidly decreased several orders of magnitude from an initial value of 5.10-20 m2 to less than 10-22 m2 at 50 MPa and 200 °C, effectively impermeable. Thus, permeability decreases rapidly in the ductile regime with strain to reach below measurable values at around 3% strain, and it remains so during subsequent semi-brittle flow up to 8% strain. We interpret this rapid decay of permeability as a result of the conjoined effect of ductile pore collapse and plastic deformation of the poorly crystalline matrix present in the sample. Our results constitute a new advancement in geoengineering as permeability during ductile deformation had never been continuously recorded during ductile deformation before. These insights further underline the need for advanced, sustainable reservoir engineering techniques in order to extract heat from high enthalpy geothermal reservoirs.


ec2-3-133-108-241.us-east-2.compute.amazonaws.com, you have accessed 0 records today.

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

Copyright 2022, 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: ec2-3-133-108-241.us-east-2.compute.amazonaws.com (3.133.108.241)
Accessed: Friday 19th of April 2024 02:12:48 PM