Reservoir Stimulation Optimization with Operational Monitoring for Creation of EGS

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EGS field projects have not sustained production at rates greater than half of what is needed for economic viability. The primary limitation that makes commercial EGS infeasible is our current inability to cost-effectively create high-permeability reservoirs from impermeable, igneous rock within the 3,000-10,000 ft depth range.
Our goal is to develop a novel fracturing fluid technology that maximizes reservoir permeability while reducing stimulation cost and environmental impact. Laboratory equipment development to advance laboratory characterization/monitoring is also a priority of this project to study and optimize the physicochemical properties of these fracturing fluids in a range of reservoir conditions. Barrier G is the primarily intended GTO barrier to be addressed as well as support addressing barriers D, E and I.

Citation Formats

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. (2013). Reservoir Stimulation Optimization with Operational Monitoring for Creation of EGS [data set]. Retrieved from https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148805.
Export Citation to RIS
A., Carlos. Reservoir Stimulation Optimization with Operational Monitoring for Creation of EGS. United States: N.p., 25 Sep, 2013. Web. doi: 10.15121/1148805.
A., Carlos. Reservoir Stimulation Optimization with Operational Monitoring for Creation of EGS. United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148805
A., Carlos. 2013. "Reservoir Stimulation Optimization with Operational Monitoring for Creation of EGS". United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148805. https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/258.
@div{oedi_258, title = {Reservoir Stimulation Optimization with Operational Monitoring for Creation of EGS}, author = {A., Carlos.}, abstractNote = {EGS field projects have not sustained production at rates greater than half of what is needed for economic viability. The primary limitation that makes commercial EGS infeasible is our current inability to cost-effectively create high-permeability reservoirs from impermeable, igneous rock within the 3,000-10,000 ft depth range.
Our goal is to develop a novel fracturing fluid technology that maximizes reservoir permeability while reducing stimulation cost and environmental impact. Laboratory equipment development to advance laboratory characterization/monitoring is also a priority of this project to study and optimize the physicochemical properties of these fracturing fluids in a range of reservoir conditions. Barrier G is the primarily intended GTO barrier to be addressed as well as support addressing barriers D, E and I.
}, doi = {10.15121/1148805}, url = {https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/258}, journal = {}, number = , volume = , place = {United States}, year = {2013}, month = {09}}
https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148805

Details

Data from Sep 25, 2013

Last updated May 30, 2017

Submitted Oct 17, 2013

Organization

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Contact

Carlos A. Fernandez

509.375.2121

Authors

Carlos A.

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

DOE Project Details

Project Lead William Vandermeer

Project Number FY13 AOP 25726

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