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Downhole heat exchanger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Drilling process for a Downhole heat exchanger. Furled tube in the foreground on the left.
Bottom end of a Downhole heat exchanger
Top end of a Downhole heat exchanger

A downhole heat exchanger, (DHE) also called a borehole heat exchanger, (BHE) is a heat exchanger installed inside a vertical or inclined borehole.[1] It is used to capture or dissipate heat to or from the ground. DHT's are used for geothermal heating, sometimes with the help of a geothermal heat pump. Downhole heat exchangers, like other use of geothermal energy, have the potential to significantly contribute to the reduction of CO2 emissions.[2] In northern Europe, DHE are already widely deployed.[3]

Types

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U-tube

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The heat exchanger usually consists of one or two u-tubes through which the carrier fluid, usually water, circulates. The space around the u-tubes is filled with groundwater or backfilled with thermally conductive grout.

Open pipe

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Another design uses a single open pipe to flow water downward. The water then returns through the annular gap between the pipe and the casing. This design provides better thermal contact than u-tubes, but risks contamination by groundwater. Since this involves practically no downhole equipment, these systems usually only go by the name of borehole heat exchangers (BHT).

Standing column well

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If no casing is installed and groundwater is permitted to charge the system, this arrangement is no longer a BHT, but rather a standing column well.

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References

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  1. ^ "Downhole Heat Exchangers" (PDF). Geo-Heat Center - Oregon Institute of Technology. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  2. ^ "Geothermal Energy - Professur für Geothermal Technologies". www.bgu.tum.de. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
  3. ^ https://www.mbie.govt.nz/assets/14861fe5a3/geothermal-barriers-update-1.pdf [bare URL PDF]