Inverse flow zone characterization using distributed temperature sensing in a deep geothermal production well located in the Southern German Molasse Basin
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
Abstract. The localization and characterization of hydraulically active zones in a
geothermal well is a major task in understanding the hydro geothermal
reservoir. This is often done based on interpretations of spinner flow meter
measurements that are performed at the end of the well test while injecting
cold water. Once a production well is equipped with an electric submersible
pump, data collection inside the reservoir and monitoring of the flow zones
is usually barely possible. In a 3.7 km (MD) deep geothermal production well
in Munich, Germany, it was successfully demonstrated in 2019 that a
permanently installed optical fiber cable could close this measurement gap.
We used this fiber-optic monitoring system to collect distributed
temperature data once the well was set into production. We inversely modeled
the inflow from the formation into the borehole from the production
temperature data with an energy and mass balance model. The derived flow
profile correlates with previous flow meter analysis and indicates that a
karstified region at the very top of the reservoir is the driving factor for
hydraulics and obtained production temperature. Qualitatively, the two
profiles acquired by distributed temperature sensing (DTS) and flow meter
are matchable, yet the production inflow profile by DTS logging is more
differentiated compared to spinner flow meter logs interpretation during
injection.
Advances in GeosciencesEarth and Planetary Sciences-Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
审稿时长
30 weeks
期刊介绍:
Advances in Geosciences (ADGEO) is an international, interdisciplinary journal for fast publication of collections of short, but self-contained communications in the Earth, planetary and solar system sciences, published in separate volumes online with the option of a publication on paper (print-on-demand). The collections may include papers presented at scientific meetings (proceedings) or articles on a well defined topic compiled by individual editors or organizations (special publications). The evaluation of the manuscript is organized by Guest-Editors, i.e. either by the conveners of a session of a conference or by the organizers of a meeting or workshop or by editors appointed otherwise, and their chosen referees.