10:00 AM - 10:15 AM
[SCG58-05] New chemical stimulation for geothermal reservoirs: Selective mineral dissolution by environmentally friendly chelaging agents
★Invited Papers
A subsequent study (Takahashi et al., 2023, Geothermics) investigated the process of such permeability enhancement and its optimum pH. In this study, we conducted stimulation experiments on fractured granite at 200 °C under confining stress using a 20 wt% aqueous solution of the sodium salt of GLDA at pH 1–8. The permeability enhancement was the highest at pH 4, at which preferential flow paths connecting the voids caused by biotite dissolution were observed. With decreasing and increasing pH, silica precipitation and suppressed selective dissolution of biotite, respectively, became more significant, accompanied by a decrease in permeability enhancement. Our findings suggested that the optimum pH was a combination of two pH values suitable for the creation of stress-resistant preferential flow paths by selective mineral dissolution of biotite and for the accelerated dissolution of quartz, which could not be achieved by the chelating agent. The successive use of first pH 4 and then pH 8 resulted in a more than 2-fold permeability enhancement in 4 h.
In another study (Salala et al., 2023, Geothermics), we also examined the effectiveness of the new chemical stimulation for volcanic rocks through flooding experiments conducted with a pH 4 GLDA solution on fractured dacitic, andesitic, and basaltic rocks from geothermal fields in El Salvador at 200 °C under confining pressure. Results showed substantial permeability enhancement of up to 4.3-fold in 2 h, where the magnitude of enhancement depended mainly on the initial proportion of Fe-rich phenocrysts, which dissolved to form voids. Therefore, this study has strengthened the possibility and effectiveness of the new chemical stimulation method to facilitate the extensive use of enhanced geothermal systems worldwide in future.