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TERRESTRIAL HEAT

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The term geothermal comes from the Greek geo meaning ... Hot Spring Bathing and Spas (Balneology) ... Japan is considered the world's leader in balneology. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TERRESTRIAL HEAT


1
TERRESTRIAL HEAT energy from the inside of the
Earth
2
What does geothermal mean?
  • The term geothermal comes from the Greek geo
    meaning earth and therine meaning heat thus
    geothermal energy is energy derived from the
    natural heat of the earth.
  • The heat inside the Earth core is continually
    generated by the decay of the long lived
    radioactive isotopes of uranium,  thorium and
    potassium, which are present in the Earth.
  • The heat that flows from the Earth's hot interior
    due to plate movements, zones of high heat flow,
    may be located close to the surface where
    convective circulation plays a significant role
    in bringing the heat close to the surface

3
What happens with the heat?
  • Without utilization, the terrestrial heat flow is
    lost to the atmosphere. In this case, the
    isotherms run parallel to the earths surface and
    the heat flow lines are perpendicular to them.
    If, instead, the heat flow can be captured, the
    isotherms are deformed and the heat flow lines
    can be diverted towards heat sinks.
  • Due to variations of the earths crust thickness
    there will be different temperature profiles from
    place to place. Some areas are known to have hot
    springs and the like and volcanic activities,
    such areas will also be well suited for
    geothermal utilization.

4
How does geothermal heat get up to the surface?
  • Sometimes the hot magma reaches all the way to
    the surface, where we know it as lava. But most
    often the magma remains below earth's crust,
    heating nearby rock and water (rainwater that has
    seeped deep into the earth) - sometimes as hot as
    700 degrees F. Some of this hot geothermal water
    travels back up through faults and cracks and
    reaches the earth's surface as hot springs or
    geysers, but most of it stays deep underground,
    trapped in cracks and porous rock. This natural
    collection of hot water is called a geothermal
    reservoir.

5
Best locations
  • Geothermal systems can be found in regions with a
    normal or slightly above normal geothermal
    gradient.
  • The margins of the plates correspond to weak,
    densely fractured zones of the crust,
    characterized by an intense seismic activity, by
    a large number of volcanoes and, because of the
    ascent of very hot materials towards the surface,
    by a high terrestrial heat flow. The most
    important geothermal areas are located around
    plate margins.
  • World pattern of plates, oceanic ridges, oceanic
    trenches, subduction zones, and geothermal
    fields.

6
Accessing geothermal energy
  • If geothermal reservoirs are close enough to the
    surface, we can reach them by drilling wells,
    sometimes over two miles deep. Scientists and
    engineers use geological, electrical, magnetic,
    geochemical and seismic surveys to help locate
    the reservoirs. Then, after an exploration well
    confirms a reservoir discovery, production wells
    are drilled.
  • Geothermal system can be described schematically
    as "convecting water in the upper crust of the
    Earth, which, in a confined space,transfers heat
    from a heat source to a heat sink, usually the
    free surface". A geothermal system is made up of
    three main elements a heat source, a reservoir
    and a fluid, which is the carrier that transfers
    the heat.

7
Generating electricity Geothermal power plants
  • In geothermal power plants, we use the natural
    hot water and steam from the earth to turn
    turbine generators to produce electricity. Unlike
    fossil fuel power plants, no fuel is burned.
    Geothermal power plants give off water vapour,
    but have no smoky emissions.
  • There are several different types of plants
    flashed steam plants, dry steam plants and binary
    power plants

8
Flashed Steam Plants
  • Most geothermal power plants operating today are
    "flashed steam" power plants. Hot water from
    production wells is passed through one or two
    separators where, released from the pressure of
    the deep reservoir, part of it flashes
    (explosively boils) to steam. The force of the
    steam is used to spin the turbine generator. To
    conserve the water and maintain reservoir
    pressure, the geothermal water and condensed
    steam are directed down an injection well back
    into the periphery of the reservoir, to be
    reheated and recycled.
  • Flash steam power plants use hot water
    reservoirs. In flash plants, as hot water is
    released from the pressure of the deep reservoir
    in a flash tank, some if it flashes to steam.

9
Dry Steam Plants
  • A few geothermal reservoirs produce mostly steam
    and very little water. Here, the steam shoots
    directly through a rock-catcher and into the
    turbine. The first geothermal power plant was a
    dry steam plant, built at Larderello in Tuscany,
    Italy in 1904. The power plants at the Larderello
    dry steam field were destroyed during World War
    II, but have since been rebuilt and expanded.
    That field is still producing electricity today.
    The Geysers dry steam reservoir in northern
    California has been producing electricity since
    1960. It is the largest known dry steam field in
    the world and, after 40 years, still produces
    enough electricity to supply a city the size of
    San Francisco.

10
Binary Power Plants
  • In a binary power plant, the geothermal water is
    passed through one side of a heat exchanger,
    where it's heat is transferred to a second
    (binary) liquid, called a working fluid, in an
    adjacent separate pipe loop. The working fluid
    boils to vapour which, like steam, powers the
    turbine generator. It is then condensed back to a
    liquid and used over and over again. The
    geothermal water passes only through the heat
    exchanger and is immediately recycled back into
    the reservoir. In some power plants, flash and
    binary processes are combined.

11
Direct (non-electrical) uses of geothermal water
  • Shallower reservoirs of lower temperature --
    21-149C (70-300F) are used directly in health
    spas, greenhouses, fish farms, and industry and
    in space heating systems for homes, schools and
    offices.
  • It is only during the last century that we have
    used geothermal energy to produce electricity.
    But using geothermal water to make our lives more
    comfortable is not new people have used it since
    the dawn of mankind. Wherever geothermal water is
    available, people find creative ways to use its
    heat.

12
Agriculture and aquaculture
  • Geothermal energy is used directly in agriculture
    and aquaculture
  • to help grow flowers, vegetables, and other crops
    in greenhouses while snow-drifts pile up outside
  • to shorten the time needed for growing fish,
    shrimp, abalone and alligators to maturity

13
Industry
  • The heat from geothermal water is used worldwide
    for industrial purposes. Some of these uses
    include drying fish, fruits, vegetables and
    timber products, washing wool, dying cloth,
    manufacturing paper and pasteurizing milk.
  • Geothermally heated water can be piped under
    sidewalks and roads to keep them from icing over
    in freezing weather. Thermal waters are also used
    to help extract gold and silver from ore and even
    for refrigeration and ice-making.

14
Hot Spring Bathing and Spas (Balneology)
  • For centuries, peoples of China, Iceland, Japan,
    New Zealand, North America and other areas have
    used hot springs for cooking and bathing. The
    Romans used geothermal water to treat eye and
    skin disease and, at Pompeii, to heat buildings.
    Medieval wars were even fought over lands with
    hot springs.
  • In Europe, natural hot springs have been very
    popular health attractions. The first known
    "health spa" was established in 1326 in Belgium.
    (One resort was named "Espa" which means
    "fountain." The English word "spa" came from this
    name.) All over Eurasia today, health spas are
    still very popular. Russia, for example, has
    3,500 spas.
  • Japan is considered the worlds leader in
    balneology. The Japanese tradition of social
    bathing dates back to ancient Buddhist rituals.
    Beppu, Japan, has 4,000 hot springs and bathing
    facilities that attract 12 million tourists a
    year. Other countries with major spas and hot
    springs include New Zealand, Mexico and the
    United States.

15
District heating
  • The oldest and most common use of geothermal
    water, apart from hot spring bathing, is to heat
    individual buildings, and sometimes entire
    commercial and residential districts.
  • A geothermal district heating system supplies
    heat by pumping geothermal water -usually 60 C
    (140F) or hotter- from one or more wells drilled
    into a geothermal reservoir. The geothermal water
    is passed through a heat exchanger which
    transfers the heat to water in separate pipes
    that is pumped to the buildings. After passing
    through the heat exchanger, the geothermal water
    is injected back into the reservoir where it can
    reheat and be used again.
  • Because it is a clean, economical method of
    heating buildings, geothermal district heating is
    becoming more popular in many places. The world's
    largest geothermal district heating system is in
    Reykjavik, Iceland, where almost all the
    buildings use geothermal heat. The air around
    Reykjavik was once very polluted by emissions
    from reliance on fossil fuels. Since it started
    using geothermal energy, Reykjavik has become one
    of the cleanest cities in the world.

16
Geothermal heat pumps
  • The heat pumps are machines that move heat in a
    direction opposite to that in which it would tend
    to go naturally, i.e. from a cold space or body
    to a warmer one. A heat pump is effectively
    nothing more than a refrigeration unit. Any
    refrigeration device (window air conditioner,
    refrigerator, freezer, etc.) moves heat from a
    space (to keep it cool) and discharges that heat
    at higher temperatures. The only difference
    between a heat pump and a refrigeration unit is
    the desired effect, cooling for the refrigeration
    unit and heating for the heat pump. A second
    distinguishing factor of many heat pumps is that
    they are reversible and can provide either
    heating or cooling in the space.
  • Geothermal heat pumps reduce electricity use
    30-60 compared with traditional heating and
    cooling systems, because the electricity which
    powers them is used only to move heat, not to
    produce it. The U.S. Environmental Protection
    Agency rates geothermal heat pumps among the most
    efficient of heating and cooling technologies.

17
Advantages of geothermal energy
  • RENEWABILITY AND SUSTAINABILITY Earths heat is
    continuously radiated from within, and each year
    rainfall and snowmelt supply new water to
    geothermal reservoirs. Production from individual
    geothermal fields can be sustained for decades
    and perhaps centuries. The U.S. Department of
    Energy classifies geothermal energy as renewable.
  • CONSERVATION OF RESOURCES When we use renewable
    geothermal energy for direct use or for producing
    electricity, we conserve exhaustible and more
    polluting resources like fossil fuels and
    uranium. Installed geothermal electricity
    generation capacity around the world is
    equivalent to the output of about 10 nuclear
    plants.
  • PROTECTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT Geothermal direct
    use facilities have minimal or no negative
    impacts on the environment. Geothermal power
    plants are relatively easy on the environment.
  • Protection of the Air and Atmosphere. Hydrogen
    sulphide gas (H2S) sometimes occurs in geothermal
    reservoirs. It is subject to regulatory controls
    for worker safety because it can be toxic at high
    concentrations. Equipment for scrubbing H2S from
    geothermal steam removes 99 of this gas. Carbon
    dioxide CO2 occurs naturally in geothermal steam
    but the geothermal plants release amounts less
    than 4 of that released by fossil fuel plants.
    And there are no emissions at all when
    closed-cycle (binary) technology is used.
  • Visual Protection. A geothermal plant sits right
    on top of its fuel source no additional land is
    needed such as for mining coal or for
    transporting oil or gas. When geothermal power
    plants and drill rigs are located in scenic
    areas, mitigation measures are implemented to
    reduce intrusion on the visual landscape.
  • LOW COSTS the price of geothermal power
    decreased with about 25 in the last 2 decades
    due to the development of the technology used and
    the involvement of the government in the research
    regarding this domain.

18
Future of geothermal energy
  • The outlook for geothermal energy use depends on
    at least three factors
  • The Demand for energy will continue to grow.
    Economies are expanding, populations are
    increasing (over 2 billion people still do not
    have electricity), and energy-intensive
    technologies are spreading. All mean greater
    demand for energy.
  • The Inventory of accessible geothermal energy is
    sizable. Using current technology geothermal
    energy from already-identified reservoirs can
    contribute as much as 10 of the United States
    energy supply. And with more exploration, the
    inventory can become larger. The entire world
    resource base of geothermal energy has been
    calculated in government surveys to be larger
    than the resource bases of coal, oil, gas and
    uranium combined
  • The Competitive Position depends primarily on
    cost
  • Costs Shorter and Longer Term. Production of
    fossil fuels (oil, natural gas and coal) are a
    relative bargain in the short term. Like many
    renewable resources, geothermal resources need
    relatively high initial investments to access the
    heat, hot water and steam. But the geothermal
    "fuel" cost is predictable and stable. Renewable
    geothermal energy is a better long term
    investment.
  • Costs Direct and Indirect. The monetary price we
    pay to our natural gas and electricity suppliers,
    and at the gas pump, is our direct cost for the
    energy we use. Geothermal energy is a clean,
    indigenous, renewable resource without hidden
    external costs.
  • Costs Domestic and Importing. Investment in the
    use of domestic, indigenous, renewable energy
    resources like geothermal energy provides jobs,
    expands the regional and national economies, and
    avoids the export of money to import fuels.

19
Conclusion
  • Energy demand is increasing rapidly worldwide.
    Some energy and environmental experts predict
    that the growth of electricity production and
    direct uses of geothermal energy will be
    revitalized by international commitments to
    reduce carbon dioxide emissions to avert global
    climate change and by the opening of markets to
    competition.

20
Made by Diana GiurghitaAnca Muntean
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