The role of pit lake thermal dynamics on the thermal performance of ground heat exchangers.

Sci Rep

Institute of Geomechanics and Underground Technology, RWTH Aachen University, 52074, Aachen, Germany.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • * It addresses the absence of guidelines for designing GHEs in water bodies and examines how lake thermal dynamics affect the efficiency of these systems through finite element modeling.
  • * Results indicate that accounting for the thermal dynamics of the lake can significantly enhance the available energy budget, potentially improving geothermal system performance, while minor variations exist based on modeling complexity.

Article Abstract

The addition of ground heat exchangers (GHEs) to a pit lake's basin has the potential for abundant, clean and renewable geothermal energy extraction using shallow geothermal systems. Basin-embedded GHEs avoid direct interaction with mine water, which has been shown to impact efficiency and longevity in mine open-loop geothermal systems negatively. The now accelerated closure of open-pit coal mines presents itself as an opportunity to use this technology. However, no guidelines currently exist for designing or operating GHEs embedded in the sediment of water bodies. Furthermore, the two-way coupling between the complex annual thermal fluid dynamics that lakes are naturally subjected to and heat fluxes on the sediments and the GHE system has not been explored. In this study, we develop and validate finite element models to assess the relevance of lake thermal stratification in the performance of a geothermal system embedded in water bodies basins, e.g., on open-pit mine closures, under temperate residential thermal loads. The results show that the pit lake's role as a thermal sink improves significantly when the lake's thermal dynamics are accounted for, with an increase of up to 292% in the lake's available energy budget. A minor variation in energy budget (~8%) was found whether the lake is modelled explicitly or simplified as a transient Dirichlet temperature boundary condition. This small difference vanishes if horizontal circulation along the lake is considered, highlighting the lake's thermal energy potential. Finally, the impact on the GHE Coefficient of Performance (COP) is evaluated, with a maximum of ~15% difference among all cases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11333475PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-69225-6DOI Listing

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