Temperature log simulations in high-enthalpy boreholes

Abstract Temperature logs have important applications in the geothermal industry such as the estimation of the static formation temperature (SFT) and the characterization of fluid loss from a borehole. However, the temperature distribution of the wellbore relies on various factors such as wellbore f...

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Main Authors: Jia Wang, Fabian Nitschke, Maziar Gholami Korzani, Thomas Kohl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-11-01
Series:Geothermal Energy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40517-019-0149-0
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spelling doaj-510263758c324ca7b420097ba28e39e82020-11-25T04:08:09ZengSpringerOpenGeothermal Energy2195-97062019-11-017112110.1186/s40517-019-0149-0Temperature log simulations in high-enthalpy boreholesJia Wang0Fabian Nitschke1Maziar Gholami Korzani2Thomas Kohl3Institute of Applied Geoscience, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)Institute of Applied Geoscience, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)Institute of Applied Geoscience, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)Institute of Applied Geoscience, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)Abstract Temperature logs have important applications in the geothermal industry such as the estimation of the static formation temperature (SFT) and the characterization of fluid loss from a borehole. However, the temperature distribution of the wellbore relies on various factors such as wellbore flow conditions, fluid losses, well layout, heat transfer mechanics within the fluid as well as between the wellbore and the surrounding rock formation, etc. In this context, the numerical approach presented in this paper is applied to investigate the influencing parameters/uncertainties in the interpretation of borehole logging data. To this end, synthetic temperature logs representing different well operation conditions were numerically generated using our newly developed wellbore simulator. Our models account for several complex operation scenarios resulting from the requirements of high-enthalpy wells where different flow conditions, such as mud injection with- and without fluid loss and shut-in, occur in the drill string and the annulus. The simulation results reveal that free convective heat transfer plays an important role in the earlier evolution of the shut-in-time temperature; high accuracy SFT estimation is only possible when long-term shut-in measurements are used. Two other simulation scenarios for a well under injection conditions show that applying simple temperature correction methods on the non-shut-in temperature data could lead to large errors for SFT estimation even at very low injection flow rates. Furthermore, the magnitude of the temperature gradient increase depends on the flow rate, the percentage of fluid loss and the lateral heat transfer between the fluid and the rock formation. As indicated by this study, under low fluid losses (< 30%) or relatively higher flow rates (> 20 L/s), the impact of flow rate and the lateral heat transfer on the temperature gradient increase can be ignored. These results provide insights on the key factors influencing the well temperature distribution, which are important for the choice of the drilling data to estimate SFT and the design of the inverse modeling scheme in future studies to determine an accurate SFT profile for the high-enthalpy geothermal environment.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40517-019-0149-0Temperature logsStatic formation temperatureWellbore simulationHigh-temperature wellHorner-plot methodHeat transfer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jia Wang
Fabian Nitschke
Maziar Gholami Korzani
Thomas Kohl
spellingShingle Jia Wang
Fabian Nitschke
Maziar Gholami Korzani
Thomas Kohl
Temperature log simulations in high-enthalpy boreholes
Geothermal Energy
Temperature logs
Static formation temperature
Wellbore simulation
High-temperature well
Horner-plot method
Heat transfer
author_facet Jia Wang
Fabian Nitschke
Maziar Gholami Korzani
Thomas Kohl
author_sort Jia Wang
title Temperature log simulations in high-enthalpy boreholes
title_short Temperature log simulations in high-enthalpy boreholes
title_full Temperature log simulations in high-enthalpy boreholes
title_fullStr Temperature log simulations in high-enthalpy boreholes
title_full_unstemmed Temperature log simulations in high-enthalpy boreholes
title_sort temperature log simulations in high-enthalpy boreholes
publisher SpringerOpen
series Geothermal Energy
issn 2195-9706
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract Temperature logs have important applications in the geothermal industry such as the estimation of the static formation temperature (SFT) and the characterization of fluid loss from a borehole. However, the temperature distribution of the wellbore relies on various factors such as wellbore flow conditions, fluid losses, well layout, heat transfer mechanics within the fluid as well as between the wellbore and the surrounding rock formation, etc. In this context, the numerical approach presented in this paper is applied to investigate the influencing parameters/uncertainties in the interpretation of borehole logging data. To this end, synthetic temperature logs representing different well operation conditions were numerically generated using our newly developed wellbore simulator. Our models account for several complex operation scenarios resulting from the requirements of high-enthalpy wells where different flow conditions, such as mud injection with- and without fluid loss and shut-in, occur in the drill string and the annulus. The simulation results reveal that free convective heat transfer plays an important role in the earlier evolution of the shut-in-time temperature; high accuracy SFT estimation is only possible when long-term shut-in measurements are used. Two other simulation scenarios for a well under injection conditions show that applying simple temperature correction methods on the non-shut-in temperature data could lead to large errors for SFT estimation even at very low injection flow rates. Furthermore, the magnitude of the temperature gradient increase depends on the flow rate, the percentage of fluid loss and the lateral heat transfer between the fluid and the rock formation. As indicated by this study, under low fluid losses (< 30%) or relatively higher flow rates (> 20 L/s), the impact of flow rate and the lateral heat transfer on the temperature gradient increase can be ignored. These results provide insights on the key factors influencing the well temperature distribution, which are important for the choice of the drilling data to estimate SFT and the design of the inverse modeling scheme in future studies to determine an accurate SFT profile for the high-enthalpy geothermal environment.
topic Temperature logs
Static formation temperature
Wellbore simulation
High-temperature well
Horner-plot method
Heat transfer
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40517-019-0149-0
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AT thomaskohl temperaturelogsimulationsinhighenthalpyboreholes
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