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Projekt Druckansicht

Three-dimensional analysis of coupled thermohaline flow and reactive transport in fractured geothermal reservoirs

Fachliche Zuordnung Hydrogeologie, Hydrologie, Limnologie, Siedlungswasserwirtschaft, Wasserchemie, Integrierte Wasserressourcen-Bewirtschaftung
Förderung Förderung von 2010 bis 2016
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 175644494
 
Erstellungsjahr 2016

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

Groundwater flow and the transport of contaminants in groundwater can be heavily influenced by spatial and temporal variations in water density. Water density increases with water salinity, and it increases with water temperature. Situations where variable-density flow occurs are fractured rock (where salinity and temperature of deep water affects water density), and coastal regions (where seawater salinity increases water density). This project aimed at understanding variable-density flow in fractured rock, and in coastal regions. These aims were realized in two PhD dissertations accompanied by two other PhD dissertations not paid by this grant, approximately 15 Master projects, and one Bachelor project. An important outcome of this project was the generation of a three-dimensional mathematical model of a coastal aquifer. That model was used and will be used in the near future to investigate different human and natural impacts on groundwater resources, in particular in the context of climatic change (sealevel rise, change of tidal activity, change of river discharge, change of evaporation and rainfall patterns, etc.). Importantly, not only can this model be applied to simulate reality at that particular site, but knowledge about how to efficiently simulate scenarios can be transferred to other coastal areas around the globe. Another important outcome of this project was the development of an efficient time-stepping method to noniteratively simulate variable-density flow and transport problems. This new method make future computer simulations much faster so that a larger number of possible scenarios can be simulated in a timely manner. From a more academic standpoint, contributing a new time-stepping method to the community is an excellent achievement. What was surprising during the course of this Emmy Noether project were the simulations results of the thermohaline (double-diffusive) convection in fractured rock. It was expected that due to the different diffusivities and in the presence of an extremely highly anisotropic medium, well-distinct horizontal layers of mixed fluid would be generated. This has previously been demonstrated in heterogeneous porous media in laboratory experiments. One reason for this unexpected outcome could be the numerical setting of thermohaline flow where front and back boundaries of the two-dimensional model were assumed to be perfectly isolating (@T=@n = 0). In future studies, this assumption could be relaxed and replaced by conducting front and back boundary layers.

Projektbezogene Publikationen (Auswahl)

 
 

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