地热能

热岩浆:新兴地热技术开发商已做好现场测试准备

在超过 2800 万美元新投资的支持下,XGS Energy 正准备推出一项名为“热力增强”的新技术。

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插图显示了热力范围增强地热井概念的建议深度和温度剖面。
来源:XGS 能源

一种将石油和天然气技术与新兴材料科学相结合的新地热概念将于今年晚些时候进行首次现场测试。

这种闭环方法被其开发商 XGS Energy 称为热力延伸增强 (TRE),旨在从独立的垂直或斜井眼产生具有成本竞争力的地热能。

该过程的熟悉部分包括让水(另一种工作流体)流过井眼,然后通过绝缘管以更高的温度循环回到地面上的标准涡轮机。

XGS 与复兴的地热领域其他公司的区别在于它计划将其泵入热岩中的专有材料。

这家总部位于加利福尼亚州帕洛阿尔托的公司声称,其 TRE 材料的导热性是岩石的 50 倍,预计与标准地热井相比,井筒可以吸收多 30% 至 50% 的热量。

XGS 首席运营官 Ghazal Izadi 解释说:“您可以将这种材料视为热交换器,将热量更快、更有效地传送到外壳,然后最终从外壳传送到工作流体。”

虽然为了保护知识产权,有关导电材料组成的详细信息被隐瞒,但 XGS 计划以低速率将其以液体浆料形式泵入井下。XGS 表示,从多个射孔流出的材料将移动到从不到 1 m 到远至 10 m 的任何地方,进入近井眼区域周围的开放裂缝,然后转变为最终的固态。

由于凝固过程,穿孔应该被密封,并且预计裂缝将在注射后闭合并紧密地围绕材料。实验室测试表明,这对于最大化其导热率至关重要。

今年 1 月,XGS 宣布这一想法在由美国电力供应商 Constellation Energy 领投的一轮股权投资中吸引了 970 万美元,使该公司自去年以来的融资总额超过 2800 万美元。

新资金将使 XGS 能够实现下一个里程碑,即在本季度末之前在德克萨斯州钻探一口浅井。尽管示范井不会用于输送热水,但它将提供某种彩排,其中将测试操作能力,包括将特殊材料注入地下的关键任务。

真正的期末考试将于今年晚些时候到来,届时该公司将尝试利用其技术重新激活废弃的地热井。

到 2026 年,XGS 希望能够钻探商业地热井,输出功率为 3 至 10 兆瓦热 (MWt)。从历史上看,地热发电厂将大约 10% 至 20% 的热能转化为电能,即 10 MWt 可能转化为不超过 2 MW 的电力。XGS 的演示建议使用多口井来增强电网的电力供应。

该公司还估计,其水井发电的成本将与其他地热和太阳能发电成本竞争。在使用现有井眼的情况下,平均电力成本预计不会超过 35 美元/兆瓦时,而新的钻井项目可能会将成本推高至 50 美元/兆瓦时左右。

一年多的实验室研究和地下建模工作支撑了这些经济预测。XGS 表示,它已经使用花岗岩样品在各种条件下测试了 TRE 浆料,证明了其承受 400°C 以上(750°F 以上)温度的能力。

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对花岗岩样品内的新型导热材料进行高温测试。
资料来源:XGS 能源。

油藏工程师、贝克休斯国际公司前全球地热负责人 Izadi 表示,与传统地热以及最近开发的增强型地热系统 (EGS) 相比,TRE 技术拥有多项优势,该系统依靠水力压裂来连接成对的注入器和生产器井。

与这些方法相比,XGS 认为其闭环过程具有更大的地理适用性,因为无论孔隙度或渗透率如何,其井都应该产生足够的热量,因为没有储层流体流动。这一特征也消除了人们对诱发地震活动的担忧,诱发地震活动最常发生在基底岩石的断层由于大量流体注入而被加压到激活点时。

在将其概念与 EGS 进行具体比较时,XGS 声称它正在考虑降低资本支出和降低碳足迹,因为它不需要钻更昂贵的水平井、获取大量注入水,也不需要使用大型水力压裂法来完成其井。

Izadi 将注入 TRE 材料的过程与石油和天然气行业中用于固井的挤压作业进行了比较,这意味着单个抽油机就足够了。

“我们将在套管周围非常局部地挤压这种材料,并利用岩石中的微裂缝或预先存在的天然裂缝,”她解释道。

当最终需要钻一口新井时,XGS 依靠基岩的简单性来帮助管理成本。

虽然它们很热并且通常深达数英里,这往往会推高成本,但 XGS 最有可能瞄准的花岗岩和玄武岩层也是厚且均匀的。这可能有助于公司放弃使用地质导向或其他先进的井位系统等技术,从而控制钻井费用。

“不需要精密钻孔,只需要越来越深,直到达到一定温度,然后我们就可以开始提取热量,”伊扎迪说。

原文链接/jpt
Geothermal energy

Hot Rock Slurry: Developer of Emerging Geothermal Tech Readies for Field Tests

Backed by more than $28 million in fresh investments, XGS Energy is prepping to introduce a new technology called thermal reach enhancement.

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Illustration showing the proposed depth and temperature profile of the thermal reach enhancement geothermal well concept.
Source: XGS Energy

A new geothermal concept that blends oil and gas technology with emerging material science is set to undergo its first field tests later this year.

Called thermal reach enhancement (TRE) by its developer XGS Energy, the closed-loop approach seeks to generate cost-competitive geothermal power from standalone vertical or deviated wellbores.

The familiar part of the process involves flowing water—or another working fluid—down the wellbore before circulating it back up at a much higher temperature through insulated tubing to a standard turbine on the surface.

What distinguishes XGS from others in the revived geothermal sector centers on a proprietary material that it plans on pumping inside the hot rocks.

The Palo Alto, California-based company claims its TRE material is 50 times more thermally conductive than rock, which it anticipates will allow wellbores to absorb 30 to 50% more heat compared to standard geothermal wells.

“You can think of the material as a heat exchanger that brings the heat faster and more efficiently to the casing and then ultimately from the casing to the working fluid,” explained Ghazal Izadi, chief operating officer of XGS.

While details about the makeup of the conductive material are withheld to protect intellectual property, XGS plans to pump it downhole in a liquid slurry form at low rates. Flowing out from multiple perforations, XGS said the material will move anywhere from less than 1 m to as far as 10 m into the open fractures around the near-wellbore area before transitioning into its final solid state.

The perforations should seal off as a result of the solidification process and the expectation is that the fractures will close post-injection and compact tightly around the material—a step lab tests suggest is vital for maximizing its thermal conductivity.

In January, XGS announced that the idea attracted $9.7 million in an equity investment round led by US electricity provider Constellation Energy, bringing the company’s total raised since last year to more than $28 million.

The new funding will enable XGS to reach its next milestone which involves drilling a shallow well in Texas by the end of this quarter. Though the demonstration well will not be used to flow hot water, it will offer a dress rehearsal of sorts where the operational capabilities, including the crucial task of injecting the special material into the subsurface, will be tested.

The real final exam will come later this year when the company attempts to use its technology to reactivate an abandoned geothermal well.

By 2026, XGS hopes to be drilling commercial geothermal wells with outputs ranging from 3 to 10 megawatts thermal (MWt). Historically, geothermal plants convert about 10 to 20% of thermal energy into electricity, i.e., 10 MWt may translate to no more than 2 MW of electrical power. Presentations from XGS suggest using multiple wells to enhance electricity supply to the grid.

The company also estimates that the cost of electricity from its wells will compete with other geothermal and solar power sources. In scenarios using existing wellbores, the levelized cost of electricity is projected to not exceed $35/MWh, while new drilling projects may drive costs up to around $50/MWh.

More than a year of laboratory research and subsurface modeling work underpin these economic projections. XGS said it has tested the TRE slurry in various conditions using granitic rock samples, demonstrating its ability to withstand temperatures above 400°C (above 750°F).

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High temperature testing of a new thermally conductive material inside a granitic rock sample.
Source: XGS Energy.

Izadi, a reservoir engineer and former global lead of geothermal for Baker Hughes International, said that the TRE technology holds several advantages over traditional geothermal along with the recently developed enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) that rely on hydraulic fracturing to connect pairs of injector and producer wells.

In contrast to these methods, XGS believes its closed-loop process offers greater geographic applicability as its wells should generate sufficient heat regardless of porosity or permeability since there is no reservoir fluid to flow. This feature also negates concerns over induced seismicity which most often occurs when faults in basement rocks are pressurized to a point of activation as the result of large-volume fluid injections.

When comparing its concept against EGS specifically, XGS asserts that it is looking at both a lower capex and a lower carbon footprint because it will not need to drill more expensive horizontal wells, source large volumes of injection water, nor use large hydraulic fracturing spreads to complete its wells.

Izadi compared the process of injecting the TRE material to the squeeze jobs used across the oil and gas industry to cement wells in place, which means a single pumping unit should be sufficient.

“We are going to squeeze this material very locally around the casing and leverage the microfractures in the rock or the preexisting natural fractures,” she explained.

When the time eventually comes to drill a new well, XGS is counting on the simplicity of basement rock to help manage costs.

While they are hot and often miles deep, which tends to drive costs up, the granitic and basaltic layers that XGS is most likely to target are also thick and homogenous. This may help contain drilling expenses by enabling the firm to forgo the use of technologies such as geosteering or other advanced well placement systems.

“We don’t need precision drilling—we just need to go deeper and deeper until we reach a certain temperature and then we can start to extract the heat,” said Izadi.