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Fracturing Deep Boreholes: Stress, Structural and Lithology-controlled Fracture Initiation Propagation Geothermal Boreholes the Upper Jurassic Carbonate Rocks of North Alpine Foreland Basin

Fracturing Deep Boreholes: Stress, Structural and Lithology-controlled Fracture Initiation Propagation Geothermal Boreholes the Upper Jurassic Carbonate Rocks of North Alpine Foreland Basin in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $169.99
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Size: Hardcover
The development of the base-load capable, climate-friendly, and practically inexhaustible source of "geothermal energy" represents an important pillar of the energy supply of the future. If it were possible to expand geothermal energy production accordingly, Germany could generate 100% of its energy in a climate-neutral manner by 2050. The joint research project "Dolomitkluft," funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy from 2016 to 2018, aims to establish a new and improved reservoir model for the Upper Jurassic carbonates of the Northern Alpine Foreland Basin for deep geothermal energy. Emerged from this project, the dissertation by Mr. Skinger geomechanically and numerically characterizes the deep geothermal reservoir in carbonate rocks—limestones and dolomites—of the Upper Jurassic in the Northern Alpine Foreland Basin in over 4000 m depth. This book specifically addresses fracture initiation, propagation, and hydraulic conductivity around a borehole and their controlling factors such as the in situ stress, the existing discontinuity network, and the geomechanical rock properties. Mr. Skinger has thus successfully addressed the most important aspects for the retrievability of deep geothermal energy at its point of origin—namely the (deep) borehole.