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1D Heat Loss Models Validation ExperimentSource

Contains data from the model validation in the 1D Heat Loss Models to Predict the Aquifer Temperature Profile during Hot/Cold Water Injection Project. The data include two COMSOL models (2D axisymmetric benchmark model and 2D Vinsome model), one python code (1D Vinsome based FEM numerical simulation), one matlab main code (1D Newton analytical solution and all results comparison visualization), and output files generated from the above models.

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Tags:
1DAnalyticalAquiferFEMGeothermalMATLABbenchmarkcodecold injectionenergyenergy storagegeothermal energy storageheat losshot injectioninjectionmodelpythonsimulationvalidationwater
Formats:
mXLSXipynbTXTmph
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Advanced TidGen Power System - Control and SCADA SystemSource

The TidGen Power System generates emission-free electricity from tidal currents and connects directly into existing grids using smart grid technology. The power system consists of three major subsystems: shore-side power electronics, mooring system, and turbine generator unit (TGU) device. This submission includes a technical report on control system development, supporting simulations and supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) system requirements. Also included is the final design of the control and SCADA system, with supporting simulations and risk mitigation control strategies to address major system technical risks.

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Tags:
CECCMSHydrokineticMHKMarineSCADATGUTidGenbackupcommunicationcondition monitoringcondition monitoring systemcontrol theorycross flow turbinecross-flow turbinecurrentdatadesignenergyfault limitsfinal designhardwarelab testlogginglogicmooring systemoceanpowerprinciplesreportsensor listshore-sidesimulationsimulationssubsystem developmentsubsystem testingsupervisory control and data acquisitiontechnologytheorytidaltidal currentturbine generator unitwarning
Formats:
PDF
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Advanced TidGen Power System - OpenFOAM Version 5 CFD Case FilesSource

The TidGen Power System generates emission-free electricity from tidal currents and connects directly into existing grids using smart grid technology. The power system consists of three major subsystems: shore-side power electronics, mooring system, and turbine generator unit (TGU) device. This submission contains supporting CFD files, case files and geometry for the Advanced TidGen. TSR = Tip speed ratio Cp = Power coefficient Cl = Lift coefficient Cd = Drag coefficient

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Tags:
CADCECCFDHydrokineticMHKMarineOpenFOAMTidGencase filescasefilescodecomputational fluid dynamicscross flow turbinecross-flow turbinecurrentenergyfield testnumerical analysisnumerical modelingoceanorpcpowerpythonrotorscriptsimulationtechnologytesttidaltidal current
Formats:
ZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Advanced TidGen Power System - ProteusDS Version 2.43.5 FilesSource

The TidGen Power System generates emission-free electricity from tidal currents and connects directly into existing grids using smart grid technology. The power system consists of three major subsystems: shore-side power electronics, mooring system, and turbine generator unit (TGU) device. ProteusDS is a full featured dynamic analysis software capable of simulating vessels, structures, lines, and technologies in harsh marine environments. This simulation software that was used to test the Advanced TidGen Power System. This submission includes the supporting Proteus simulation files.

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Tags:
CECCobscook BayHydrokineticMHKMarineProteusProteusDSRigid bodyTidGenWestern Passageanalysiscomponentcross flow turbinecross-flow turbinecurrentdynamicenergygeometryoceanorpcpowersimulationtechnologytidaltidal currentultimate limit state
Formats:
ZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Applications of Fractured Continuum Model to Enhanced Geothermal System Heat Extraction ProblemsSource

This paper describes the applications of the fractured continuum model to the different enhanced geothermal systems reservoir conditions. The capability of the fractured continuum model to generate fracture characteristics expected in enhanced geothermal systems reservoir environments are demonstrated for single and multiple sets of fractures. Fracture characteristics are defined by fracture strike, dip, spacing, and aperture. This paper demonstrates how the fractured continuum model can be extended to represent continuous fractured features, such as long fractures, and the conditions in which the fracture density varies within the different depth intervals. Simulations of heat transport using different fracture settings were compared with regard to their heat extraction effectiveness. The best heat extraction was obtained in the case when fractures were horizontal. A conventional heat extraction scheme with vertical wells was compared to an alternative scheme with horizontal wells. The heat extraction with the horizontal wells was significantly better than with the vertical wells when the injector was at the bottom.

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No licence known
Tags:
EGSfracturefracture characteristicsfracture continuumfractured continuum modelgeothermalheat extractionhorizontal wellsreservoir environmentsimulationvertical wells
Formats:
PDF
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Aquantis 2.5 MW Ocean Current Generation Device Design DetailsSource

Items in this submission provide the detailed design of the Aquantis Ocean Current Turbine and accompanying analysis documents, including preliminary designs, verification of design reports, CAD drawings of the hydrostatic drivetrain, a test plan and an operating conditions simulation report. This dataset also contains analysis trade off studies of fixed vs. variable pitch and 2 vs. 3 blades.

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Tags:
AquantisBOMCADCECHydrokineticMHKMarineanalysis reportaxialaxial flow turbineaxisbill of materialsblade configurationcurrentdesigndesign reviewdetailsdrivetrainenergyfixed pitchhorizontalhydrostatic drivetrainoceanocean currentoperating conditionspowerreportseawater bearingsimulationstructural designtechnologytest planturbinevariable pitch
Formats:
XLSXPPTXSTEPDOCXXLSMPDFPPT
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
BLOSOM - release

Link to BLOSOM release download site

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Tags:
blosomblossomoil-spillsimulation
Formats:
HTML
National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)about 1 year ago
Carbon Capture Simulation Initiative (CCSI) Toolset

An open source computational toolset to accelerate and de-risk technology development and commercialization through first-principles, multi-scale modeling, optimization and uncertainty quantification.

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Tags:
advanced process controlcarbon capturecfdexperimental designmachine learningmodelingoptimizationreduced order modelssimulationuncertainty quantification
Formats:
HTML
National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)about 1 year ago
Catalyst Design in Nitrate RemovalSource

Based on the volcano plot developed by Dr. Goldsmith group (Report linked in submission), we utilized DFT (density functional theory) calculations to search for bimetallic materials in the application of catalysts in aqueous nitrate removal. The calculations are conducted via the high-throughput automated workflow package developed by our group (Github linked in submission) using VASP commercial first-principles calculation software.

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No licence known
Tags:
DFTDFT CalculationsNAWINitrateaqueous nitrate removalbimetallic materialscodedensity functional theorydensity functional theory calculationsdesalinationgithubhigh-throughput automated workflowmodelnitrate reductionnitrate removalpythonsimulationwaterwater treatment
Formats:
HTMLPDF9b02179JSONZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Chemical Impact of Elevated CO2 on Geothermal Energy ProductionSource

Numerical simulations have shown that the use of supercritical CO2 instead of water as a heat transfer fluid yields significantly greater heat extraction rates for geothermal energy. If this technology is implemented successfully, it could increase geothermal energy production and offset atmospheric emissions of greenhouse gases. However, the impact of geochemical reactions between acidic waters in equilibrium with supercritical CO2 and the reservoir rock have not been evaluated. At issue are enhanced rock-water interactions that may reduce reservoir porosity and permeability and may exacerbate downstream scaling. The publications included in this submission aim to assess the geochemical impact of CO2 on geothermal energy production by analyzing the geochemistry of existing geothermal fields with elevated natural CO2, to measure realistic rock-water rates for geothermal systems using laboratory and field-based experiments, and to develop reactive transport models using the filed-based rates to simulate production scale impacts.

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No licence known
Tags:
chlorite dissolution kineticsco2co2-egsdacitedissolutionegsegs-co2fracture permeabilitygeochemical alterationgeochemical reactiongeochemistrygeothermalgreywackemineral alterationmineral scalingmodelingnew zealandprecipitationrhyoliterock-gas interactionsequestrationsimulationtaupo volcanic zone
Formats:
PDF
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Closed Loop Geothermal Working Group: GeoCLUSTER App, Subsurface Simulation Results, and PublicationsSource

To better understand the heat production, electricity generation performance, and economic viability of closed-loop geothermal systems in hot-dry rock, the Closed-Loop Geothermal Working Group -- a consortium of several national labs and academic institutions has tabulated time-dependent numerical solutions and levelized cost results of two popular closed-loop heat exchanger designs (u-tube and co-axial). The heat exchanger designs were evaluated for two working fluids (water and supercritical CO2) while varying seven continuous independent parameters of interest (mass flow rate, vertical depth, horizontal extent, borehole diameter, formation gradient, formation conductivity, and injection temperature). The corresponding numerical solutions (approximately 1.2 million per heat exchanger design) are stored as multi-dimensional HDF5 datasets and can be queried at off-grid points using multi-dimensional linear interpolation. A Python script was developed to query this database and estimate time-dependent electricity generation using an organic Rankine cycle (for water) or direct turbine expansion cycle (for CO2) and perform a cost assessment. This document aims to give an overview of the HDF5 database file and highlights how to read, visualize, and query quantities of interest (e.g., levelized cost of electricity, levelized cost of heat) using the accompanying Python scripts. Details regarding the capital, operation, and maintenance and levelized cost calculation using the techno-economic analysis script are provided. This data submission will contain results from the Closed Loop Geothermal Working Group study that are within the public domain, including publications, simulation results, databases, and computer codes. GeoCLUSTER is a Python-based web application created using Dash, an open-source framework built on top of Flask that streamlines the building of data dashboards. GeoCLUSTER provides users with a collection of interactive methods for streamlining the exploration and visualization of an HDF5 dataset. The GeoCluster app and database are contained in the compressed file geocluster_vx.zip, where the "x" refers to the version number. For example, geocluster_v1.zip is Version 1 of the app. This zip file also contains installation instructions. **To use the GeoCLUSTER app in the cloud, click the link to "GeoCLUSTER on AWS" in the Resources section below. To use the GeoCLUSTER app locally, download the geocluster_vx.zip to your computer and uncompress this file. When uncompressed this file comprises two directories and the geocluster_installation.pdf file. The geo-data app contains the HDF5 database in condensed format, and the GeoCLUSTER directory contains the GeoCLUSTER app in the subdirectory dash_app, as app.py. The geocluster_installation.pdf file provides instructions on installing Python, the needed Python modules, and then executing the app.

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No licence known
Tags:
CLGWGClosed Loop Geothermal Working GroupDASHGeoCLUSTERLCOELCOHapplicaitonclosed loopcoaxialcoaxial configurationcodeconfigurationdatabaseeconomicenergygeothermalhdf5hdrhot-dry rockinstallationmodelingpythonsCO2 working fluidsimulationsubsurfaceu-shape configurationu-shapedwater working fluid
Formats:
ZIPorg
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Community Resilience through Low-Temperature Geothermal Reservoir Thermal Energy StorageSource

Submitted data include simulations related to underground thermal battery (UTB) simulations described in Modeling and efficiency study of large scale underground thermal battery deployment, presented at GRC, October 2021. The UTB is comprised of a tank of water, a helical heat exchanger in the center of tank and connected to a water source heat pump, and a phase change material (PCM). Compared to a conventional VBGHE, the UTB is designed to be installed at a much shallower depth, therefore, with a cheaper cost. In addition, the GSHP efficiency is improved due to natural convection of water and additional load capacity provided by PCM. The goal of this study is to explore factors that may affect the efficiency of large-scale UTB deployment. The simulations found in this submission relate to the report on UTB deployment.

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No licence known
Tags:
GSHPUTBUnderground Thermal Batteryalternative technologybatterycost reductionenergyenergy storagegeothermalground source heat pumpheat exchangerheat pumplow-cost alternativemodelmodelingperformance modelphase change materialsimulationthermal storage
Formats:
ZIPDOCXPPTXXLSX
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Computational Evaluation of Mg–Salen Compounds as Subsurface Fluid Tracers: Molecular Dynamics Simulations in Toluene–Water Mixtures and Clay Mineral Nanopores

Molecular modeling of metal-salen tracer compounds interacting with oil-water mixtures and in mineral pores.

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No licence known
Tags:
fluid flowmolecular modelingsimulationtracers
Formats:
HTML
National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)about 1 year ago
Computational Fluid Dynamics Simulation of Oscylator cylindersSource

This is one of the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations. The parameters for the test are in the info.txt file.

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Tags:
CECCFDHydrokineticMHKMarineOscylatorOscylator-4Vortex Hydro Energycomputationalcomputational fluid dynamicscoupledcurrentcurrent energycylinder dataenergyflow speedfluid dynamicsinteractionmodelingoscillatingoscylator cylinderspowerraw datasimulation
Formats:
ogvTXTdatZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Coupling Subsurface and Above-Surface Models for Optimizing the Design of Borefields and District Heating and Cooling SystemsSource

Accurate dynamic energy simulation is important for the design and sizing of district heating and cooling systems with geothermal heat exchange for seasonal energy storage. Current modeling approaches in building and district energy simulation tools typically consider heat conduction through the ground between boreholes without flowing groundwater. While detailed simulation tools for subsurface heat and mass transfer exist, these fall short in simulating above-surface energy systems. To support the design and operation of such systems, the study developed a coupled model including a software package for building and district energy simulation, and software for detailed heat and mass transfer in the subsurface. For the first, it uses the open-source Modelica Buildings Library, which includes dynamic simulation models for building and district energy and control systems. For the heat and mass transfer in the soil, it uses the TOUGH simulator. The TOUGH family of codes can model heat and multi-phase, multi-component mass transport for a variety of fluid systems, as well as chemical reactions, in fractured porous media. The study validated the coupled modeling approach by comparing the simulation results with one from the g-function based ground response model. It then looked into effects when the water table and the regional groundwater flow are considered in the ground, from the perspective of heat exchange between borehole and ground, and the electrical consumption of the district heating and cooling systems. To access the simulation models, please find the links in the submission: -- For coupled approach validation: see model Buildings.Fluid.Geothermal.Borefields.Examples.BorefieldsWithTough and Buildings.Examples.DistrictReservoirNetworks.Examples.Reservoir3Variable_TOUGH from the "Modelica Building Library" resource, branch issue1495_tough_interface, commit a2667c0. -- For the study of the effect of water table: see model Buildings.Examples.DistrictReservoirNetworks.Examples.Reservoir3Variable_TOUGH from he "Modelica Building Library" resource, branch issue1495_tough_interface_moreIO, commit 760de49. -- For the study of the effect of regional groundwater flow: see Buildings.Examples.DistrictReservoirNetworks.Examples.Reservoir3Variable_TOUGH from he "Modelica Building Library" resource, branch issue1495_tough_interface_moreIO_3D, commit c2a2d2a. The coupling interface script "GrounResponse.py" can be found from the above links in the folder Buildings/Resources/Python-Sources. Also, the needed files for TOUGH simulation are in the folder Buildings/Resources/Python-Sources/ToughFiles that can be accessed through the above links. A brief description of these files is given below; detailed specifications for the first three files may be found in the TOUGH3 Users Guide (Jung et al., 2018) https://tough.lbl.gov/documentation/tough-manuals/. (1) INCON - initial conditions for each grid block (2) INFILE - main input file with material properties and control parameters (3) MESH - description of the computational grid (4) readsave - Modelica/TOUGH interface program: read the final output of TOUGH simulation after TOUGH time step and prepare for transfer to Modelica for next Modelica time step (5) readsave.inp - input parameters for program readsave (6) writeincon - Modelica/TOUGH interface program: write the output of Modelica after Modelica time step and prepare for transfer to TOUGH as initial conditions for the next TOUGH step (7) writeincon.inp - input parameters for program writeincon

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No licence known
Tags:
CouplingDistrict Energy SystemEnergyGeothermalGeothermal BofieldModelicaModelica Buildings LibraryTOUGHborefieldcodedistrict coolingdistrict heatingenergy storagegeothermal heat exchangeground source heat pumpgshpmodelmodelingoptimizationpythonseasonal energy storagesimulation
Formats:
moZIPPDFHTML
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Data requirements for EOR surfactant-polymer process simulation and analysis of El Dorado pilot-project simulation, Butler County, Kansas. Volume II. Appendices

The results of computer simulation of the El Dorado surfactant-polymer EOR pilot project, Butler County, Kansas indicated that conventional data from the project and other data in the public domain were not adequate for geologic, reservoir and process characterizations in a complex numerical simulation. As used by GURC in geologic characterization, and by INTERCOMP in process characterization and input into the CFTE simulator, the collective body of field and chemical data and related assumptions necessary for simulator input was not sufficient to predict how the chemical flood would behave in the Admire 650-foot sandstone reservoir. Based upon this study, a comprehensive body of data requirements for EOR simulation is defined in detail. Geologic characterization includes descriptors for rock, interwell and intrasystem correlations; reservoir characterization includes descriptors for fluid/rock, production, and flow rate properties; process characterization includes descriptors for chemical properties, interactions and functions. Reservoir heterogeneity is a principal problem in EOR simulation. It can be overcome within reasonable economic limits by successive orders of descriptors from: microscale (rock), achieved through borehole and core analyses; to macroscale (interwell), achieved through multiple borehole correlations; to megascale (intrasystem), achieved through extrapolation of rock and correlative well data into a generic depositional model that more »

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No licence known
Tags:
El DoradoEnhanced Oil RecoveryGeophysicalModelingSurfactant-polymer processTypes of Datasimulation
Formats:
.PDF
National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)about 1 year ago
Design of High-Deflection Foils MHK Applications - FEA modelsSource

The Ocean Renewable Power Company's (ORPC's) goal is to design, develop, and test hydrofoils with large deflections. The effects of the deflections on cross-flow turbine performance would be evaluated in order to inform design considerations for full-scale water turbines and other marine hydrokinetic devices. Finite element models - NASTRAN files Model scale turbines tested in UNH tow tank Model loads from CFD models

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No licence known
Tags:
FEAHydrokineticMHKMarineairfoilceccross flow turbinecurrent energy converterdesignenergyfinite element analysisfoilhydrofoilmodelpowersimulationstraintest
Formats:
nas
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Design of high deflection foils for MHK applications - CFD filesSource

The Ocean Renewable Power Company's (ORPC's) goal is to design, develop, and test hydrofoils with large deflections. The effects of the deflections on cross-flow turbine performance would be evaluated in order to inform design considerations for full-scale water turbines and other marine hydrokinetic devices. OpenFOAM V1912 files for straight foil model scale turbines in the University of New Hampshire tow tank. Strut Locations = (0.13, 0.225, 0.450, 0.675, 0.900) [m] Tip speed ratio = 2.40

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No licence known
Tags:
CFDHydrokineticMHKMarineOpenFOAMairfoilceccross flow turbinecurrent energy converterdesignenergyfoilhydrofoilmodelpowersimulationstraight turbinetidal turbineturbine
Formats:
ZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Design of high-deflection foils MHK applications - CFD models - Helical turbinesSource

The Ocean Renewable Power Company's (ORPC's) goal is to design, develop, and test hydrofoils with large deflections. The effects of the deflections on cross-flow turbine performance would be evaluated in order to inform design considerations for full-scale water turbines and other marine hydrokinetic devices. CFD models of helical model scale turbines tested at UNH OpenFOAM v1912 Tip Speed Ratio (TSR) = 3.00 Different strut configurations

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No licence known
Tags:
CFDHydrokineticMHKMarineairfoilceccross flow turbinecurrent energy converterdesignenergyfoilhelical turbinehydrofoilmodelpowersimulationturbine
Formats:
ZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Design of high-deflection foils MHK applications - FEA models - Helical turbinesSource

The Ocean Renewable Power Company's (ORPC's) goal is to design, develop, and test hydrofoils with large deflections. The effects of the deflections on cross-flow turbine performance would be evaluated in order to inform design considerations for full-scale water turbines and other marine hydrokinetic devices. FEA models - NASTRAN Helical foil turbines tested at UNH tow tank Glass and carbon composite material properties Loads derived from CFD models

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No licence known
Tags:
FEAHydrokineticMHKMarineairfoilceccross flow turbinecurrent energy converterdesignenergyfoilhelical turbinehydrofoilmaterialmaterial studymodelpowersimulationturbine
Formats:
nas
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
EGS Collab Experiment 1: TOUGH2-CSM Simulation of Embedded Natural Fractures and Chemical Tracer Transport and SorptionSource

The EGS Collab SIGMA-V project is a multi-lab and university collaborative research project that is being undertaken at the Sanford Underground Research Facility (SURF) in South Dakota. The project consists of studying stimulation, fluid-flow, and heat transfer processes at a scale of 10-20 m, which is readily amenable to detailed characterization and monitoring. One objective of the project is to establish circulation from injector to producer by hydraulically fracturing the injector. Data generated during these experiments is to be compared with predictions from coupled thermal, hydrological, mechanical, and chemical simulators. One such a simulator, TOUGH2-CSM, has been enhanced in order to simulate EGS Collab SIGMA-V project experiments. These modifications include adding tracers, the capability to model tracer sorption, and an embedded fracture formulation. A set of example problems validate our conservative tracer transport and sorption formulations. We then simulated tracer transport and thermal breakthrough for the first EGS Collab SIGMA-V experiment. This dataset includes the TOUGH2-CSM input and output files associated with the thermal and tracer simulations. A conference paper is included for additional context.

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Tags:
EGSEGS CollabSIGMA-VSURFSanford Underground Research FacilityTOUGH2TOUGH2-CSMbreakthroughchemicalcirculationenergyenhanced geothermal systemsfluid flowfracturesfracturinggeothermalheat flowhydraulicinjectioninjectormodelingmonitoringnaturalreservoirsimulationsorptiontemperaturethermaltracertransfer
Formats:
ZIPPDFTXT
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Energy and Economic Assessment of a Stirling Engine Powered by Solar Energy in BoliviaSource

The Bolivian governments concerns that are related to reducing the consumption of diesel fuel, which is imported, subsidized, and provided to isolated electric plants in rural communities, have led to the implementation of hybrid power systems. The data in this submissions was created to compare a photovoltaic (PV)/Stirling battery system to a more traditional (PV)/diesel/battery system. The data includes: - MATLAB Simulink model of a Parabolic dish-Stirling engine-battery system. - Input data (Meteorological and load demand) for El Carmen, Tablani, and Pojo Pata communities

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No licence known
Tags:
BoliviaMATLABSimulinkStirlingStirling battery systemStirling enginebatterycodedemanddieselenergyenergy storagehybrid battery systemloadload demandmeteorological datamodelpowersimulationsystem
Formats:
slxXLSXHTML
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Finite Element Analysis (FEA) for Water-Foam Fracturing of Granite RockSource

In addition to the foam data that were obtained from literature and that were collected from the current study, simulation data was also generated from finite element analysis (FEA) conducted in this study using COMSOL Multiphysics software. The FEA models were built to simulate the experiments conducted at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) on cement and granite samples. In these FEA models, temperature was kept at ambient while the pressure profile resembled the loading conditions during the ORNL experiments, where pressure was either monotonically increased or applied cyclically. The cement material was used as a model material and was used to study Von Mises stress and tensile stress distribution for different bore hole length geometry using a parametric sweep with water as fracturing fluid using solid-fluid interaction module. For the granite material, FEA models were developed for stress analysis of cylindrical samples with water or foam fluids. The solid mechanics module in COMSOL was implemented to solve for Von Mises stress and tensile stress. The fluid-structure interaction module was implemented to solve for water-foam interaction on granite cylinder with addition of fluid-loading on structure, i.e., large deformation in solid mechanics with no impact on fluid deformation. Foam was considered as a pseudo single-phase compressible fluid for which material properties were calculated from water and gas (nitrogen) phases. The density of foam is calculated as a function of the densities of water and nitrogen, while viscosity is a function of temperature. Four types of FEA analyses were modelled: 1. Monotonic injection with water 2. Monotonic injection with foam 3. Cyclic injection with water 4. Cyclic injection with foam All the COMSOL files are converted to a zip file which is save in .mph.

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No licence known
Tags:
COMSOLEGSEnhanced Geothermal SystemFEAFinite Element AnalysisFoam FracturingGraniteenergyfoamfoam fracturing fluidfracturing fluidgeothermalmodelsimulationsolid mechanics
Formats:
ZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Foam Fracturing Study for Stimulation Development of Enhanced Geothermal SystemsSource

This is a final technical report for the project: Foam Fracturing Study for Stimulation Development of Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS). The goal is to demonstrate the feasibility of foam fracturing in EGS applications. The project, led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), was conducted in collaboration with Temple University. The report describes the research activities with Task 1 at ORNL: foam fracturing testing system development and experimental study on foam fracturing, and Task 2 at Temple University: foam testing and foam characterization. Main findings are: 1. A foam fracturing test system has been developed at ORNL, which can be used to perform foam fracturing under pressure up to 6,000 psi. The system monitors foam density during fracturing online and is capable of testing materials in both monotonic and cyclic (up to 50 Hz) injections. 2. Foam fracturing tests were carried out on Charcoal black granite specimens with a blind borehole to the middle length. Two diameters of blind borehole were tested; G2 series: 9.53 mm and G3 series: 4.76 mm. N2-in-water foam was used with AOS as a surfactant. 3. There was a hole-size effect on fracture initiation pressure. The effect is smaller in the case of foam, which was influenced by the high penetrability of gas in foam. Breakdown pressure showed a behavior just as that of fracture pressure; namely an increased value for small hole samples, while the effect in water fracture was more impressive than in foam fracture. 4. Water mass was reduced in foam fracturing within similar range of breakdown pressures. In G2 series, it was decreased from 10.44 g for water fracturing to 5.17 g, representing more than 50% water reduction. Therefore, there is the potential to reduce water use in EGS stimulation through foam fracturing. 5. Use of cyclic injection has the potential to reduce the breakdown pressure and seismicity in EGS application. Experiments using 4-s cycle period found that specimens can be fractured with a low number of cycles. The fatigue pressure was approximately 64 - 77% of monotonic breakdown pressure for water fracturing and 58 - 94% of the breakdown pressure for foam fracturing. 6. A foam stability testing system has been developed that can test foam at 220 Deg C to 2,000 psi. Tested components of candidate foams included two gases: N2 and CO2; 4 surfactants: AOS, SDS, NP-40 and CTAC; 5 stabilizing agents: guar, bentonite clay, borate salt, silica NPs, and GO. 7. N2 and AOS provided the most stable performance over the tested ranges. Furthermore, the AOS foam with stabilizing agents of guar and borate salt (crosslinker) offered the highest half-life of 20 minutes at 200 Deg C and 1,000 psi. 8. Arrhenius equation and modified power law have been demonstrated to fit well the half-time vs. temperature and pressure data, respectively. These relations can be useful to provide the suggestion for future foam stability study. This submission contains the supporting data developed during the project: 1) A final technical report 2) Granite fracturing data in monotonic and cyclic injections with water and N2 foam Foam performance data in various temperatures and pressures, including half-time, is submitted separately.

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No licence known
Tags:
EGSblind boreholedataenergyenhanced geothermal systemsfatiguefoamfoam fracturingfoam stabilityfracturinggeothermalsample datasimulationstresstesttime datawaterless stimulation
Formats:
PDFZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
G-Function Library for Modeling Vertical Bore Ground Heat ExchangerSource

This library contains g-functions (thermal response functions) for standard, regularly spaced vertical borehole ground heat exchangers. In total, it contains 34, 321 configurations. To permit interpolation, each configuration has g-functions for heights of 24, 48, 96, 192, and 384 m. All the g-functions were calculated with burial depths of 2m, and borehole diameters of 15 to 17.5 cm, depending on height. In configurations with uniform spacing, the spacing between the boreholes is set to 5m, though it can be scaled to other horizontal spacings.

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No licence known
Tags:
energyg-functiongeothermalghpground heat exchangerground heat pumpheat exchangerheat pumplibrarymodelsimulationthermal response functions
Formats:
ZIPJSONPDFXLSX
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
GEOPHIRES Simulations for Deep Direct Use (DDU) ProjectsSource

This folder contains the GEOPHIRES codes and input files for running the base case scenarios for the six deep direct-use (DDU) projects. The six DDU projects took place during 2017-2020 and were funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Geothermal Technologies Office. They investigated the potential of geothermal deep direct-use at six locations across the country. The projects were conducted by Cornell University, West Virginia University (WVU), University of Illinois (U of IL), Sandia National Laboratory (SNL), Portland State University (PSU), and National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). Four projects (Cornell, WVU, U of IL, SNL) investigated geothermal for direct heating of a local campus or community, the project by PSU considered seasonal subsurface storage of solar heating, and the NREL project investigated geothermal heating for turbine inlet cooling using absorption chillers. To allow comparison of techno-economic results across the six DDU projects, GEOPHIRES simulations were set up and conducted for each project. The GEOPHIRES code was modified for each project to simulate the local application and incorporate project-specific assumptions and results such as reservoir production temperature or financing conditions. The base case input file is included which simulates the base case conditions assumed by each project team. The levelized cost of heat (LCOH) is calculated and matches the base case LCOH reported by the project teams.

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No licence known
Tags:
Champagne-UrbanaChampaign-UrbanaCornellDDUDeep Direct UseGEOPHIRESHawthorneIllinoisIllinois BasinLCOHNevadaOregonPortlandPortland BasinUniversity of IllinoisUrbana-ChampaignWVUWest VirginiaWest Virginia Universityabsorptionabsorption chillercostdrillingeconomicsenergyexperimentflowgeothermalinjection testlevelized cost of heatmodelingporosityreservoirsimulationsubsurface storagetechno-economictechnologytemperaturethermal conductivitywell datawellbore
Formats:
ZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
GOOML Big Kahuna Forecast Modeling and Genetic Optimization FilesSource

This submission includes example files associated with the Geothermal Operational Optimization using Machine Learning (GOOML) Big Kahuna fictional power plant, which uses synthetic data to model a fictional power plant. A forecast was produced using the GOOML data model framework and fictional input data, and a genetic optimization is included which determines optimal flash plant parameters. The inputs and outputs associated with the forecast and genetic optimization are included. The input and output files consist of data, configuration files, and plots. A link to the Physics-Guided Neural Networks (phygnn) GitHub repository is also included, which augments a traditional neural network loss function with a generic loss term that can be used to guide the neural network to learn physical or theoretical constraints. phygnn is used by the GOOML framework to help integrate its machine learning models into the relevant physics and engineering applications. Note that the data included in this submission are intended to provide a demonstration of GOOML's capabilities. Additional files that have not been released to the public are needed for users to run these models and reproduce these results. Units can be found in the readme data resource.

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Big KahunaGOOMLcodeconfigurationdataenergyexampleflash plantsforecastgenetic optimizationgeothermalinputsmachine learningmodelneural networkoperationsoptimizationoutputsphygnnphysics guided neural networkspower plantprocessed datapythonsimulationsteam fieldsteamfieldsynthetic datawells
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
GeoThermalCloud framework for fusion of big data and multi-physics models in Nevada and Southwest New MexicoSource

Our GeoThermalCloud framework is designed to process geothermal datasets using a novel toolbox for unsupervised and physics-informed machine learning called SmartTensors. More information about GeoThermalCloud can be found at the GeoThermalCloud GitHub Repository. More information about SmartTensors can be found at the SmartTensors Github Repository and the SmartTensors page at LANL.gov. Links to these pages are included in this submission. GeoThermalCloud.jl is a repository containing all the data and codes required to demonstrate applications of machine learning methods for geothermal exploration. GeoThermalCloud.jl includes: - site data - simulation scripts - jupyter notebooks - intermediate results - code outputs - summary figures - readme markdown files GeoThermalCloud.jl showcases the machine learning analyses performed for the following geothermal sites: - Brady: geothermal exploration of the Brady geothermal site, Nevada - SWNM: geothermal exploration of the Southwest New Mexico (SWNM) region - GreatBasin: geothermal exploration of the Great Basin region, Nevada Reports, research papers, and presentations summarizing these machine learning analyses are also available and will be posted soon.

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Tags:
BradyBrady Hot SpringsGeoThermalCloudGreat BasinLos Alamos National LaboratoryNevadaNew MexicoSmartTensorsSouthwest New Mexicoenergygeothermalgeothermal cloudmachine learningmachine-learningmodelmulti-physicssimulationsite data
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jlZIPgovHTML
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Ground Source Heat Pump Computational ResultsSource

This data submission includes simulation results for ground loop heat pump systems located in 6 different cities across the United States. The cities are Boston, MA, Dayton, OH, Omaha, NE, Orlando, FL, Sacramento, CA, and St. Paul, MN. These results were obtained from the two-dimensional geothermal computer code called GEO2D. GEO2D was written as part of this DOE funded grant. The results included in this submission for each of the 6 cities listed above are: 1) specific information on the building being heated or cooled by the ground loop geothermal system, 2) some extreme values for the building heating and cooling loads during the year, 3) the inputs required to carry out the simulation, 4) a plot of the hourly building heating and cooling loads throughout the year, 5) a plot of the fluid temperature exiting the ground loop for a 20 year period, 6) a plot of the heat exchange between the ground loop and the ground for a 20 year period, and 7) ground and ground loop temperature contour plots at different times of the year for the 20 year period.

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BostonCAComputational ResultsDaytonFLFull temperature fieldsGround Source Heat Pump SystemMAMN.NEOHOmahaOrlandoSacramentoSt. Paulgeothermalground source heat pump systemshome heating and cooling load informationsimulationtemperature profiles
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PDF
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Hard Rock Drilling Optimization SoftwareSource

The main objective of the developed software is to reduce the cost per foot during drilling, in other words, optimize the drilling operational parameters in achieving optimum ROP while avoiding critical operational parameters due to either low ROP, drillstring vibration, accelerated cutter wear, or low MSE. The developed software can also be used for post-well analysis to provide insight and lessons learned for future drilling operations. Several functions are available in the software to help the user perform drilling analysis, optimization, and simulation.

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Tags:
Drilling optimizationDrilling simulationGUIGeothermal DrillingHard rock drillingcustom softwaredrillingdrilling analysisgeothermalhard rockmodeloptimizationsimulationsoftware
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EXE
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
M3 Wave DMP/APEX WEC Final Technical ReportSource

This project successfully developed methods for numerical modeling of sediment transport phenomena around rigid objects resting on or near the ocean floor. These techniques were validated with physical testing using actual sediment in a large wave tank. These methods can be applied to any nearshore structure, including wave energy devices, surge devices, and hinged flap systems. These techniques can be used to economically iterate on device geometries, lowering the cost to refine designs and reducing time to market. The key takeaway for this project was that the most cost-effective method to reduce sediment transport impact is to avoid it altogether. By elevating device structures lightly off the seabed, sediment particles will flow under and around, ebbing and flowing naturally. This allows sediment scour and accretion to follow natural equalization processes without hydrodynamic acceleration or deceleration effects of artificial structures. This submission includes the final technical report for this DOE project. The objective of this project was to develop a set of analysis tools (hydrodynamics and structural models providing inputs into a sediment model), and use those tools to identify and refine the optimal device geometry for the Delos-Reyes Morrow Pressure Device (DMP), commercialized by M3 Wave LLC as "APEX."

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APEXDMPDelos-Reyes Morrow PressureHydrokineticLCOEM3 WaveMHKMarineWECconvertereconomicsenergyflapgravity baseharvesterhingedlab testlaboratorynearshorenumericaloceanpowerpressure differentialseabed mountedsediment transportsimulationstationarysubmergedsurgetank testtank testingtechnologytesttestingwave
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Mass of Water Turbine Current Energy Converter CFD ResultsSource

The CFD (computational fluid dynamics) results for the Mass of Water Turbine (MOWT) current energy converter from MWNW Consulting (formerly Ecosse IP). Each case is self-contained in its own tar.gz archive file. The archive contains the scripts required to perform a full simulation using OpenFOAM v1906. The scripts to process the output and plot forces are included in "Plotting Scripts", and all computational meshes generated are included in "Computational Grids".

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Tags:
CECCFDMOWTMarineOpenFOAMTEAMERbeltbelt drivecomputational fluid dynamicscurrent energy converterenergymass of water turbinemodelpaddlepaddle beltsimulation
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GZ
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
NWEI Azura Technology Demonstration at WETS - Final ReportsSource

This submission contains the final scientific and technical report for the Azura technology demonstration at WETS. Also contained are all test reports as referenced in the final report. All test data from this project may be found under 'Related Datasets' on the MHKDR submission page.

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AzuraHawaiiHydrokineticMHKMarineNWEINorthwest Energy InnovationsSimulinkWECWETSabsorberenergyfield testmodelingoceanocean deploymentocean testpointpoint absorber buoypowerrenewablesimulationtechnologytestingwave
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Net Shape Fabricated Low Cost MHK Pass-Through the Hub Turbine Blades with Integrated Health Management TechnologySource

The primary objective of this project is to develop a three-blade MHK rotor with low manufacturing and maintenance costs. The proposed program will design, fabricate and test a novel half-scale low cost, net shape fabricated single piece three-blade MHK rotor with integrated health management technology to demonstrate significant Capital Expenditures (CAPEX) and Operational Expenditures (OPEX) cost reductions due to the novel design and manufacturing process. The proposed project is divided into three major tasks: Task 1: Single Piece Three-blade Kinetic Hydropower System (KHPS) Rotor Full-Scale and Half-Scale Design; Task 2: Composite Manufacturing Trials and Half-Scale Prototype Rotor Fabrication; and Task 3: Material Characterization and Half-Scale Prototype Test and Evaluation. These three tasks include design and analysis of full-scale and half-scale three-blade rotor prototypes using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and finite-element analysis (FEA), demonstration of a novel half-scale net shape fabrication process, determination of a fatigue threshold composite strain allowable, three-blade rotor mold design, manufacture of half-scale rotor clam shell mold, three-blade rotor test fixture design and fabrication, development of final manufacturing and test plans, manufacture of the half-scale net shape composite single blade and three-blade prototypes, and test and evaluation of the half-scale rotor.

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Tags:
ADVCADCAPEXCECCFDComposite MaterialsFASTFEAGen5dHydrokineticKHPSKinetic Hydropower SystemNet Shape FabricationOPEXOVER-RELRITETest and EvaluationThreshold FatigueVPVerdant Poweras-fabricatedaxial flow turbineeconomicsfabricationfatigue testflowhealth managementmodelingrotorsimulationsteady-statestrainstressthree-bladetransientvisualization
Formats:
PPTXstpXLSXDOCXZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center, OR - Final Technical Report & AppendicesSource

In 2008, the US Department of Energy (DOE) Wind and Water Power Program issued a funding opportunity announcement to establish university-led National Marine Renewable Energy Centers. Oregon State University and the University of Washington combined their capabilities in wave and tidal energy to establish the Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center, or NNMREC. NNMREC's scope included research and testing in the following topic areas: - Advanced Wave Forecasting Technologies; - Device and Array Optimization; - Integrated and Standardized Test Facility Development; - Investigate the Compatibility of Marine Energy Technologies with Environment, Fisheries and other Marine Resources; - Increased Reliability and Survivability of Marine Energy Systems; - Collaboration/Optimization with Marine Renewable and Other Renewable Energy Resources. To support the last topic, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) was brought onto the team, particularly to assist with testing protocols, grid integration, and testing instrumentation. NNMREC's mission is to facilitate the development of marine energy technology, to inform regulatory and policy decisions, and to close key gaps in scientific understanding with a focus on workforce development. In this, NNMREC achieves DOE's goals and objectives and remains aligned with the research and educational mission of universities. In 2012, DOE provided NNMREC an opportunity to propose an additional effort to begin work on a utility scale, grid connected wave energy test facility. That project, initially referred to as the Pacific Marine Energy Center, is now referred to as the Pacific Marine Energy Center South Energy Test Site (PMEC-SETS) and involves work directly toward establishing the facility, which will be in Newport Oregon, as well as supporting instrumentation for wave energy converter testing. This report contains a breakdown per subtask of the funded project. Under each subtask, the following are presented and discussed where appropriate: the initial objective or hypothesis; an overview of accomplishments and approaches used; any problems encountered or departures from planned methodology over the life of the project; impacts of the problems or rescoping of the project; how accomplishments compared with original project goals; and deliverables under the subtasks. Products and models developed under the award are also included.

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BLADE ELEMENTHydrokineticIIIMHKMarineNETSNNMRECOROSUOregon State UniversityPMECPacific Marine Energy CenterSETSSWANSouth Energy Test SiteUniversity of WashingtonWAMITWAVEWATCHactuatoranalysisanchoringarrayberthcablescompatibilitydevelopmentdevicediskemulationenergyengineeringenvironmenterrorfacilityfinalforecastinggoalgridinfrastructureinstrumentationmarket and supply chainmodelmonitoringmooringnear shorenorth energy test siteobjectiveoptimizationoregonphysicsphysics-basedpowerpre-designreliabilityreportresourceshelfsimulationsite selectionsurvivabilitytechnicaltechnologytesttidalwave
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PDF
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Original HANNA Mono-Radial Turbine Post Access ReportSource

Final report on a TEAMER study undertaken by Alden Research Laboratory for the Mono-radial turbine invented by John Clark Hanna DBA: Hanna Wave Energy Primary Drives. The study is a predictive numerical and CFD (computational fluid dynamics) report of the mentioned Hanna Mono-Radial Turbine. The device is an impulse-type mono-radial air turbine PTO for wave energy conversion. The turbine is self-rectified, meaning that it spins in one direction only while capturing the bi-directional air flows developed within an OWC (Oscillating Water Column) system.

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CFDHydrokineticMHKMarineOWCPTOTEAMERWECcomputational fluid dynamicsenergyfluid simulationmodelmono-radialmonoradialnumerical modelnumerical studyoscillating water columnpowerpower take-offpower takeoffradialreportself rectifiedself-rectifiedsimulationturbinewave energy converter
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DOCX
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Oscylator-4 Energy Converter St. Clair River Installation Data 2016Source

Data collected during the 2016 St. Clair River installation of the Oscylator-4 energy converter.

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Tags:
3-D converterCECClair RiverFISH-MHKFISH-VIVACEHydrokineticMHKMarineMichiganPort HuronSt. Clair RiverVIVVIVACEVortexVortex Hydro Energybodybuoyancyconvertercoulombcurrentcurrent energycylinderdampingdatadeploymentdynamicenergyfield testfishfrictioninstallationmodelingoceanoscylatoroscylator-4powerriverschoolschool of fishshapedsimulationsynergistic kinematicstechnologytesttorquetransformativevortex induced vibrations
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Performance estimation of resonance-enhanced dual-buoy wave energy converter using coupled time-domain simulationSource

This paper presents the modeling methodology and performance evaluation of the resonance-enhanced dual-buoy WEC (Wave Energy Converter) by HEM (hydrodynamic & electro-magnetic) fully-coupled-dynamics time-domain-simulation program. The numerical results are systematically compared with the authors' 1/6-scale experiment. With a direct-drive linear generator, the WEC consists of dual floating cylinders and a moon-pool between the cylinders, which can utilize three resonance phenomena from moon-pool dynamics as well as heave motions of inner and outer buoys. The contact and friction between the two buoys observed in the experiment are also properly modeled in the time-domain simulation by the Coulomb-friction model. Moon-pool resonance peaks significantly exaggerated in linear potential theory are empirically adjusted through comparisons with measured values. A systematic comparative study between the simulations and experiments with and without PTO (power-take-off) is conducted, and the relative heave displacements/velocities and power outputs are well matched. Then, parametric studies are carried out with the simulation program to determine optimum generator parameters. The performance with various wave conditions is also assessed. Highlights: 1. Dual-cylinder wave energy converter with moon-pool is designed to use three resonances. 2. Interaction between the dual cylinder and the linear generator is solved in time domain. 3. The proposed simulation model correlated to the experiments provides coincided results with experiments. 4. Moon-pool and guiding mechanisms between the cylinders influence dynamic response and power notably. 5. Optimum parameters of the linear generator are found using the correlated model.

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Coulomb-friction modelHEMHydrokineticMHKMarinePTOWECdisplacementdual-cylinderdynamicsenergyexperimentheavehydrodynamic-electro-magneticlinear generatormodelmodelingmoon-poolpoint absorberpoint absorber buoypowerresonancesimulationsurfacetime-domainvelocity
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Pressure-Temperature Simulation at Brady Hot SpringsSource

These files contain the output of a model calculation to simulate the pressure and temperature of fluid at Brady Hot Springs, Nevada, USA. The calculation couples the hydrologic flow (Darcy's Law) with simple thermodynamics. The epoch of validity is 24 March 2015. Coordinates are UTM Easting, Northing, and Elevation in meters. Temperature is specified in degrees Celsius. Pressure is specified in Pascal.

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Tags:
BradyBrady Hot SpringsInSARInSAR-MEQMEQPoroTomoenergygeothermalinducedmicroearthquakemicroseismicitypressureseismicitysimulationtemperature
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TXTPDFCSV
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Reactive Transport Modeling of Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage System at Stockton, NJSource

This is the modeling data (input/output files of TOUGHREACT 4.10) used to simulate the reactive transport processes of the Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage (ATES) operations at Stockton University, NJ. Readme.txt lists all the files. TOUGHREACT 4.10 requires to reproduce the modeling output. The modeling data in this submission is related to the Aquifer Injection for Energy Storage purposes outlined in "Reactive Transport Modeling of Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage System at Stockton, NJ During Seasonal Operations".

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TOUGHREACTaquiferdataenergyenergy storagegeochemicalgeothermalhydrogeochemicalinjectionmodelmodeling dataseasonal coolingseasonal energy storageseasonal heatingseasonal heating and coolingsimulationthermal energy storagethermal storage
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Reactive Transport Simulations of High-Tempertature Geologic Thermal Energy Storage (GeoTES) in Deep Saline Formations - I/O FilesSource

Simulation input and output files, post-processed figures and excel tables, and tecplot layout files for generating figures. These simulations were run with TOUGHREACT V4.12 by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in 2021. This work was completed as part of the geologic thermal energy storage (GeoTES) research project reported in the final report for Phase I of this work, which is linked below.

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GeoTESRTESTESdeep saline formationsenergygeologicgeothermalhigh temphigh-temperatureinputinput filesmodelingoutputoutput filesreactive transportsimulationthermal energy storagetoughreact
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Stimulation at Desert Peak -Modeling with the Coupled THM Code FEHMSource

Numerical modeling of the 2011 shear stimulation at the Desert Peak Well 27-15 using a coupled thermal-hydrological-mechanical simulator. This submission contains the finite element heat and mass transfer (FEHM) executable code for a 64-bit PC Windows-7 machine, and the input and output files for the results presented in the included paper from ARMA-2013 meeting.

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Tags:
EGSFEHMTHMgeothermalmodelingshear stimulationsimulationstimulationthermal-hydrological-mechanical
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Subsurface Characterization and Machine Learning Predictions at Brady Hot Springs ResultsSource

Geothermal power plants typically show decreasing heat and power production rates over time. Mitigation strategies include optimizing the management of existing wells - increasing or decreasing the fluid flow rates across the wells - and drilling new wells at appropriate locations. The latter is expensive, time-consuming, and subject to many engineering constraints, but the former is a viable mechanism for periodic adjustment of the available fluid allocations. Data and supporting literature from a study describing a new approach combining reservoir modeling and machine learning to produce models that enable strategies for the mitigation of decreased heat and power production rates over time for geothermal power plants. The computational approach used enables translation of sets of potential flow rates for the active wells into reservoir-wide estimates of produced energy and discovery of optimal flow allocations among the studied sets. In our computational experiments, we utilize collections of simulations for a specific reservoir (which capture subsurface characterization and realize history matching) along with machine learning models that predict temperature and pressure timeseries for production wells. We evaluate this approach using an "open-source" reservoir we have constructed that captures many of the characteristics of Brady Hot Springs, a commercially operational geothermal field in Nevada, USA. Selected results from a reservoir model of Brady Hot Springs itself are presented to show successful application to an existing system. In both cases, energy predictions prove to be highly accurate: all observed prediction errors do not exceed 3.68% for temperatures and 4.75% for pressures. In a cumulative energy estimation, we observe prediction errors that are less than 4.04%. A typical reservoir simulation for Brady Hot Springs completes in approximately 4 hours, whereas our machine learning models yield accurate 20-year predictions for temperatures, pressures, and produced energy in 0.9 seconds. This paper aims to demonstrate how the models and techniques from our study can be applied to achieve rapid exploration of controlled parameters and optimization of other geothermal reservoirs. Includes a synthetic, yet realistic, model of a geothermal reservoir, referred to as open-source reservoir (OSR). OSR is a 10-well (4 injection wells and 6 production wells) system that resembles Brady Hot Springs (a commercially operational geothermal field in Nevada, USA) at a high level but has a number of sufficiently modified characteristics (which renders any possible similarity between specific characteristics like temperatures and pressures as purely random). We study OSR through CMG simulations with a wide range of flow allocation scenarios. Includes a dataset with 101 simulated scenarios that cover the period of time between 2020 and 2040 and a link to the published paper about this project, where we focus on the Machine Learning work for predicting OSR's energy production based on the simulation data, as well as a link to the GitHub repository where we have published the code we have developed (please refer to the repository's readme file to see instructions on how to run the code). Additional links are included to associated work led by the USGS to identify geologic factors associated with well productivity in geothermal fields. Below are the high-level steps for applying the same modeling + ML process to other geothermal reservoirs: 1. Develop a geologic model of the geothermal field. The location of faults, upflow zones, aquifers, etc. need to be accounted for as accurately as possible 2. The geologic model needs to be converted to a reservoir model that can be used in a reservoir simulator, such as, for instance, CMG STARS, TETRAD, or FALCON 3. Using native state modeling, the initial temperature and pressure distributions are evaluated, and they become the initial conditions for dynamic reservoir simulations 4. Using history matching with tracers and available production data, the model should be tuned to represent the subsurface reservoir as accurately as possible 5. A large number of simulations is run using the history-matched reservoir model. Each simulation assumes a different wellbore flow rate allocation across the injection and production wells, where the individual selected flow rates do not violate the practical constraints for the corresponding wells. 6. ML models are trained using the simulation data. The code in our GitHub repository demonstrates how these models can be trained and evaluated. 7. The trained ML models can be used to evaluate a large set of candidate flow allocations with the goal of selecting the most optimal allocations, i.e., producing the largest amounts of thermal energy over the modeled period of time. The referenced paper provides more details about this optimization process

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Tags:
BHSBrady Hot SpringsCNNLSTMMLMLPNevadaOSROpen Source ReservoirPCATensorFlowcharacterizationdoubletdual-porosityenergyflowgeothermalheat maphydrothermalinjection testmachine learningpdepredictionpressureprincipal component analysisreservoirreservoir managementreservoir modelingsimulationsingle-fracturestimulationsubsurfacetemperaturetime series
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Technical Assessment Massive Foam Stimulation Attempt

METC/SP-79/2

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Tags:
Geologyassessmentattemptfoammassivemercerpasimulationtechnical
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National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)about 1 year ago
Thermal-Hydrological-Mechanical Modelling of Stockton University Reservoir Cooling System, Fine Scale Stress Test ModellingSource

Mesh, properties, initial conditions, injection/withdrawal rates for modelling thermal, hydrological, and mechanical effects of fluid injection to and withdrawal from ground for Stockton University reservoir cooling system (aquifer storage cooling system), Galloway, New Jersey, for unscheduled two hour injection at 133 % designed capacity, on fine scale grid, with some results. Second simulation of J.T. Smith, E. Sonnenthal, P. Dobson, P. Nico, and M. Worthington, 2021. Thermal-hydrological-mechanical modeling of Stockton University reservoir cooling system, Proceedings of the 46th Workshop on Geothermal Reservoir Engineering, Stanford University, SGP-TR-218, from which Figures 6-9, pertain.

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CFDFEANew JerseyStockton Universityaquifer storage cooling systemcoolingflow simulationfluidgeothermalgeothermal coolingground sourceinjectionmodelmodelingreservoir cooling systemsimulationstressstress modelingstress testthermal-hydrological-mechanicalwithdrawal
Formats:
inpZIPhalfsrcsTXTpdf?t=1612906699PDFtec
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Thermal-Hydrological-Mechanical Modelling of Stockton University Reservoir Cooling System, Large Scale GridSource

Mesh, properties, initial conditions, injection/withdrawal rates for modeling thermal, hydrological, and mechanical effects of fluid injection to and withdrawal from ground for Stockton University reservoir cooling system (aquifer storage cooling system), Galloway, New Jersey, on large scale grid, with some results. First simulation of J.T. Smith, E. Sonnenthal, P. Dobson, P. Nico, and M. Worthington, 2021. Thermal-hydrological-mechanical modeling of Stockton University reservoir cooling system, Proceedings of the 46th Workshop on Geothermal Reservoir Engineering, Stanford University, SGP-TR-218, from which Figures 1-5 pertain.

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Tags:
CFDFEANew JerseyStockton Universityaquifer storage cooling systemcoolingflowflow simulationgeothermalgeothermal coolinggroundground coolingground sourceinjectionmodelmodelingreservoirreservoir coolingreservoir cooling systemsimulationthermal-hydrological-mechanicalwithdrawal
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TXTinpZIPmonthlywspiketecpdf?t=1612906699PDF
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Three-dimensional numerical simulation for various geometries of solid oxide fuel cells

DOE/MC/22045-2364

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3dGeologycellsfuelgeometriesnumericnumericaloxidesimulationsolidvarious
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National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)about 1 year ago
Understanding Constraints on Geothermal Sustainability Through Reservoir Characterization at Brady Geothermal Field, NevadaSource

The vast supply of geothermal energy stored throughout the Earth and the exceedingly long time required to dissipate that energy makes the world's geothermal energy supply nearly limitless. As such, this resource holds the potential to provide a large supply of the world's energy demands; however, like all natural resources, it must be utilized in an appropriate manner if it is to be sustainable. Understanding sustainable use of geothermal resources requires thorough characterization efforts aimed at better understanding subsurface properties. The goal of this work is to understand which critical subsurface properties exert the most influence on sustainable geothermal production as a means to provide targeted future resource characterization strategies. Borehole temperature and reservoir pressure data were analyzed to estimate reservoir thermal and hydraulic properties at an active geothermal site. These reservoir properties then served as inputs for an analytical model which simulated net power production over a 30-year period. The analytical model was used to conduct a sensitivity analysis to determine which parameters were most critical in constraining the sustainability of a geothermal reservoir. Modeling results reveal that the number of preferential flow pathways (i.e. fractures) used for heat transport provides the greatest impact on geothermal reservoir sustainability. These results suggest that early and pre-production geothermal reservoir exploration would achieve the greatest benefit from characterization strategies which seek to delineate the number of active flow pathways present in the system.

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Tags:
Brady Hot SpringsDTSNevadaPoroTomoanalysisanalyticalassessmentborehole pressureborehole temperaturecharacterizationdistributed temperature sensingenergyflowflow pathsfracturesgeothermalheathydraulichydrogeologyidentificationmodelnumericalparameterspathwayspower productionpreferentialpressureproductionpropertiesreservoirreservoir characterizationresorcesensitivitysimulationsubsurface propertiessustainabilitysustainable usetemperaturethermaltransport
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PDF
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Utah FORGE Phase 3 Native State Model: 2022 UpdateSource

This is the Phase 3 native state model update. The Phase 3 numerical model represents a significant subsurface volume below the FORGE site footprint. The model domain of 4.0 km x 4.0 km x 4.2 km is located approximately between depths of 4000 to 4200 meters below land surface. This data archive consists of 10 files, 4 of which are simulation input files and the remaining 6 are simulation output files. There is an included readme.txt file that contains details on each of the data files. The input files include meshes, FALCON code inputs, tabulated data of water properties, temperature values, and model boundaries. The output files include simulation outfiles and point data of modeled material properties.

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Tags:
16A78-3256-3258-3278-3278B-32Utah FORGEenergyfracturesgeothermalinputinput filesmodelnative state modelpore pressurepressureprocessed dataraw datareservoir potentialsimulationstresstemperaturewater
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ZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Utah FORGE: Site Earthquake AnimationSource

This is a .kml earthquake animation covering the period of 1991 - 2011 for the Utah Milford FORGE site. It displays seismic events using different sized bubbles according to magnitude. It covers the general Utah FORGE area (large shaded rectangle) with the final site displayed as a smaller polygon along the northwestern margin. Earthquakes are subdivided into clusters and the time, date, and magnitude of each event is included. Nearby seismic stations are symbolized with triangles. This was created by the University of Utah Seismograph Stations (UUSS).

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Tags:
ArcGISEGSEarthquakesFORGEGoogle earthUtahUtah FORGEanimationbackgroundearthquakeeventgeospatialgeospatial datageothermalmagnitudeseismic monitoringseismicityseismologysimulationtime lapse
Formats:
KML
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago