• Title of article

    Three-dimensional imaging of a geothermal system using temperature and geological models derived from a well-log dataset

  • Author/Authors

    Yun Teng، نويسنده , , Katsuaki Koike، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    21
  • From page
    518
  • To page
    538
  • Abstract
    The accurate imaging of geothermal systems from the ground surface down to great depths is an interdisciplinary problem common to geothermal resource exploration and development. Rocks can be characterized mainly in terms of their lithology, mineralogy, fracture distribution, permeability, thermal conductivity and porosity, and similarly the geothermal fluid (and its circulation) by its geochemistry, flow pattern, velocity, temperature and pressure. Some of these data are obtained by well logging and from laboratory tests conducted on drillhole cores. In general, the distribution of geothermal wells is not random, and well data are limited in terms of quantity and depth range. Accordingly, a sophisticated spatial modeling technique is indispensable in the three-dimensional imaging of geothermal systems. We describe a versatile 3-D modeling method that can be used to determine the temperature, flow velocity, and distribution of geological units within a geothermal field based on well log data. The model results for the Hohi geothermal area, Japan, provide plausible estimates of temperature, flow velocity, and geology to a depth of 3000 m. Superimposition of the three spatial models we obtained shows that, at Hohi, two geothermal reservoirs are localized near highly fractured fault zones that provide paths for the ascent of thermal fluids from depth. © 2007 CNR. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
  • Keywords
    geothermal reservoir , 3-D spatial modeling , Temperature distribution , fault zones , Geological model , Fluid circulation , JAPAN , Hohi
  • Journal title
    Geothermics
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Geothermics
  • Record number

    431043