Thermal-Hydrological-Mechanical Modelling of Stockton University Reservoir Cooling System, Fine Scale Stress Test Modelling
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.
Citation Formats
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. (2021). Thermal-Hydrological-Mechanical Modelling of Stockton University Reservoir Cooling System, Fine Scale Stress Test Modelling [data set]. Retrieved from https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1843041.
Smith, J Torquil, Sonnenthal, Eric, Dobson, Patrick, Nico, Peter, and Worthington, Mark. Thermal-Hydrological-Mechanical Modelling of Stockton University Reservoir Cooling System, Fine Scale Stress Test Modelling. United States: N.p., 22 Feb, 2021. Web. doi: 10.15121/1843041.
Smith, J Torquil, Sonnenthal, Eric, Dobson, Patrick, Nico, Peter, & Worthington, Mark. Thermal-Hydrological-Mechanical Modelling of Stockton University Reservoir Cooling System, Fine Scale Stress Test Modelling. United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1843041
Smith, J Torquil, Sonnenthal, Eric, Dobson, Patrick, Nico, Peter, and Worthington, Mark. 2021. "Thermal-Hydrological-Mechanical Modelling of Stockton University Reservoir Cooling System, Fine Scale Stress Test Modelling". United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1843041. https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/1363.
@div{oedi_5643, title = {Thermal-Hydrological-Mechanical Modelling of Stockton University Reservoir Cooling System, Fine Scale Stress Test Modelling}, author = {Smith, J Torquil, Sonnenthal, Eric, Dobson, Patrick, Nico, Peter, and Worthington, Mark.}, abstractNote = {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.}, doi = {10.15121/1843041}, url = {https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/1363}, journal = {}, number = , volume = , place = {United States}, year = {2021}, month = {02}}
https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1843041
Details
Data from Feb 22, 2021
Last updated Feb 1, 2022
Submitted Feb 1, 2022
Organization
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Contact
J Torquil Smith
501.549.3817
Authors
Original Source
https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/1363Research Areas
Keywords
geothermal, cooling, thermal-hydrological-mechanical, modeling, ground source, stress test, stress modeling, model, stress, injection, withdrawal, fluid, simulation, aquifer storage cooling system, reservoir cooling system, Stockton University, New Jersey, geothermal cooling, CFD, flow simulation, FEADOE Project Details
Project Name Community Resilience through Low-Temperature Geothermal Reservoir Thermal Energy Storage
Project Lead Arlene Anderson
Project Number FY21 AOP 2.7.1.4