Publications by authors named "Suresh Govindarajan"

The effect of natural fractures, their orientation, and their interaction with hydraulic fractures on the extraction of heat and the extension of injection fluid are fully examined. A fully coupled and dynamic thermo-hydro-mechanical (THM) model is utilized to examine the behavior of a fractured geothermal reservoir with supercritical CO as a geofluid. The interaction between natural fracture and hydraulic fracture, as well as the type and location of geofluids, influences the production temperature, thermal strain, mechanical strains, and effective stress in rock/fractures in the reservoir.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Subsurface leaching of agricultural runoff has been identified to pose a serious hazard to the soil-water ecosystem and human health, mostly due to the associated contamination with nitrate. Our understanding of the nature of contaminant spread in the vadose and aquifer zones has been improved from recent mechanistic models on the flow and transport of contaminants through fractured porous media. The present study aims to explore the impacts of skin formation in a fracture-matrix aquifer system onto the nitrogen species transport under non-isothermal settings using numerical modeling.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Subsurface contamination is a frequent occurrence in fractured porous systems, posing a potential threat for the groundwater contamination. Tracking the movement of these contaminants is an inherent aspect of effective remediation strategy. The non-isothermal conditions prevailing in the subsurface environment further add to the complexity of the existing scenario.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aquifer in Tondiarpet, Chennai, had been severely contaminated with petroleum fuels due to an underground pipeline leakage. Groundwater samples were analyzed quarterly for priority pollutants such as benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylenes, and naphthalene (BTEXN) using purge and trap gas chromatography and mass spectrometer from 2016 to 2018. The maximum concentrations of BTEXN in groundwater at the site were found to be greater than the permissible limits significantly.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Quantum dots (QDs) originating from two-dimensional (2D) sheets of graphitic carbon nitride (g-CN), graphene, hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN), monoatomic buckled crystals (phosphorene), germanene, silicene and transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) are emerging zero-dimensional materials. These QDs possess diverse optical properties, are chemically stable, have surprisingly excellent biocompatibility and are relatively amenable to surface modifications. It is therefore not difficult to see that these QDs have potential in a variety of bioapplications, including biosensing, bioimaging and anticancer and antimicrobial therapy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Underground pipelines are frequently used to transport petroleum fuels, through industrial as well as residential zones. Chennai is one of the four largest metropolitan cities of India. The region of interest in this study is located in the northern part of the Chennai.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF