Author/Authors :
Alexey Kiryukhin، نويسنده , , Tianfu Xu، نويسنده , , Karsten Pruess، نويسنده , , John Apps، نويسنده , , Igor Slovtsov، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Data on fluid chemistry and rock mineralogy are evaluated for a number of geothermal
fields located in the volcanic arc of Japan and Kamchatka, Russia, Common chemical
characteristics are identified and used to define scenarios for detailed numerical modeling
of coupled thermal–hydrodynamic–chemical (THC) processes. The following scenarios of
parental geothermal fluid upflow were studied: (1) single-phase conditions, 260 C at the
bottom (‘Ogiri’ type); (2) two-phase conditions, 300 C at the bottom (‘Hatchobaru’ type);
and (3) heat pipe conditions, 260 C at the bottom (‘Matsukawa’ type). THC modeling for
the single-phase upflow scenario shows wairakite, quartz, K-feld spar and chlorite formed as the
principal secondary minerals in the production zone, and illite-smectite formed below 230 C.
THC modeling of the two-phase upflow shows that quartz, K-feldspar (microcline), wairakite
and calcite precipitate in the model as principal secondary minerals in the production
zone. THC modeling of heat pipe conditions shows no significant secondary deposition of
minerals (quartz, K-feldspar, zeolites) in the production zone. The influence of thermodynamic
and kinetic parameters of chemical interaction, and of mass fluxes on mineral
phase changes, was found to be significant, depending on the upflow regime. It was found
that no parental geothermal fluid inflow is needed for zeolite precipitation, which occurs
above 140 C in saturated andesite, provided that the porosity is greater than 0.001. Incontrast, quartz and K-feldspar precipitation may result in a significant porosity reduction
over a hundred-year time scale under mass flux conditions, and complete fracture sealing
will occur given sufficient time under either single-phase or two-phase upflow scenarios. A
heat pipe scenario shows no significant porosity reduction due to lack of secondary mineral
phase deposition.
# 2004 CNR. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Keywords :
Russia , MODELING , TOUGHREACT , geothermal fields , Kamchatka , JAPAN