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- Title
Dimensionless Thermal Efficiency Analysis for Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage.
- Authors
Tang, Darrell W. S.; Rijnaarts, Huub H. M.
- Abstract
Seasonal warm and cold water storage in groundwater aquifers is a cost‐effective renewable energy technology for indoor heating and cooling. Simple dimensionless analytical solutions for the thermal recovery efficiency of Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage (ATES) systems are derived, subject to heat losses caused by thermal diffusion and mechanical dispersion. The analytical solutions pertain to transient pumping rates and storage durations, and multiple cycles of operation, and are applicable to various well configurations and thermal plume geometries. Heat losses to confining layers, its implications for optimizing plume geometries and aspect ratios, and heat spreading due to free convection are also discussed. This provides a general tool for broad and rapid assessment of aquifers and ATES systems. We show that if heat exchange with the confining layers is negligible, the thermal recovery efficiency of thermal plumes with cylindrical geometry is independent of the aquifer porosity and heat capacity C0. Therefore, if mechanical dispersion is negligible as is often the case, the only aquifer property that affects the recovery efficiency is the aquifer thermal conductivity. The field‐scale aquifer thermal conductivity λ can therefore be inferred from the recovery efficiency of a push‐pull heat recovery test. Remarkably, an increase in C0 could either increase, decrease, or not affect the recovery efficiency, depending on the thermal plume geometry. Hence, the analytical solutions reveal that the recovery efficiency is affected by complex interactions between the thermal plume geometry and aquifer properties. Approximate analytical solutions for subsurface temperature profiles over an entire ATES cycle are also derived. Key Points: Dimensionless analytical solutions of Aquifer Thermal Energy Storage (ATES) thermal efficiency F for various plume geometries, dispersion processes, and transient pumpingF depends on aquifer thermal conductivity, mechanical dispersivity, and (except for cylindrical plumes)–heat capacity; but not on porosityDiscussion on multi‐year operation, aquifer temperature evolution, optimal plume aspect ratios, and free convection (high temperature ATES)
- Subjects
HEAT storage; WATER salinization; THERMAL efficiency; THERMAL analysis; FREE convection; NATURAL heat convection
- Publication
Water Resources Research, 2023, Vol 59, Issue 11, p1
- ISSN
0043-1397
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1029/2023WR035797