Content area

Abstract

Use of well doublets for groundwater-sourced heating or cooling typically results in a "thermal plume" of cool or warm reinjected groundwater. Such a plume may be regarded either as a potential anthropogenic geothermal resource or as pollution, depending on downstream aquifer usage. A thermal plume may pose an external risk to downstream users and environmental receptors or an internal risk to the sustainability of the well doublet, due to the phenomenon of thermal feedback. A three-tier assessment of the risk of thermal feedback is proposed, based on: (1) consideration of well separation and yield; (2) analytical modelling of heat migration in a doublet to ascertain breakthrough time and post-breakthrough temperature evolution and (3) numerical modelling of complex scenarios.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Thermogeological assessment of open-loop well-doublet schemes: a review and synthesis of analytical approaches
Author
Banks, David
Pages
1149-1155
Publication year
2009
Publication date
Jul 2009
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
14312174
e-ISSN
14350157
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
211501588
Copyright
Springer-Verlag 2009