Publication Date:
2017
abstract:
The CHEAP - GSHPs Horizon 2020 project (No. 657982) focuses on the development of more efficient and safe
shallow geothermal systems and the reduction of time consuming and installation costs.
One of its most important objectives is the development of the design of new coaxial steel GSHEs and of newly
designed helical heat basket type GSHE by means of innovative installation methodologies and drilling machines.
For this purpose, in Molinella test site (Bologna, Italy) several types of borehole heat exchangers have been built.
The Molinella test site is the open-air laboratory where several types of ground heat exchangers, such as helical
heat basket and double-U and coaxial probes, can be directly compared by means of GRT tests, cores thermal
measurement, and optical fibers measurements. Moreover, in this test site, new drilling machines and techniques
are being tested.
Given a geological setting and thermal load, the heat exchange capacity of a ground heat exchanger depends on
the used materials and probe dimensions (length, diameter and thickness). In Molinella, in an area of 300m2,
7 different probes are installed: 4 coaxial probes of different materials and different length (96 and 50m) and
diameters of internal and external tubes, 2 heat baskets (15m length, different diameter and different pitch) and
a traditional double-U (50 m length). The monitoring equipment is constituted by a piezometer 25m long, a
monitoring point instrumented with a hybrid fibre optical cable 100m long, and a standard GRT device.
The local stratigraphy is known from a 100m core sample, made on purpose. The lithological sequence is typical
of a quaternary floodplain deposition environment, rich in silt and silty clay deposits, alternated with sandy layers.
For all the main recognized layers, the thermal properties (conductivity and capacity) have been directly measured
on the collected core samples on site in order to maintain their natural water content. The thermal exchange
capacities of the tested GSHEs are directly detected both by comparing the GRT test results and by means of
numerical analysis based on different modelling approaches.
The Molinella test site is particularly remarkable for the possibility to directly compare the energetic efficiency
of the tested GSHEs. The GRT results can be compared with the mathematical models outputs and with the
thermal measurements directly performed on the sediments core samples. The coupling of traditional GRT and
optical fibre temperature recording system allows sharing the data in order to obtain the thermal contribution of
the different underground layers interested by the heat exchange processes.
The Molinella test site therefore represents a very extraordinary possibility to improve the knowledge of thermal
exchange processes in shallow geothermal systems.
Iris type:
04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
GRT; DOUBLE-U; MOLINELLA TEST SITE
List of contributors: