GEOCOGEN 4

GEOCOGEN PROJECT
  1. Part 1
  2. Part 2
  3. Part 3

GEOCOGEN Project – Part 4

The GEOCOGEN Project

Point number 1 – how do we get the energy to the surface?

This is the crux of the project – it is the part of the project that was not feasible when Kurt Brunnschweiler invented it 30 being ago. Today’s tunneling equipment is fully capable of building a shaft or tunnel as much as 15-20 kilometres deep – that is around 10-15 miles deep. Switzerland has some of the premier tunneling operators in the world, and they are drilling tunnels this long – albeit mostly horizontally – through the Alps and in many other locations around the world. For these tunnels, large diameter vertical ventilation shafts are also necessary, and some of these are 2 kilometres (6600 feet) long and more.

The objective is to make the tunnel up to 10 meters (33 feet) in diameter, shore up the walls to prevent cave-ins, and run piping from the surface level to the bottom of the tunnel where the water will be heated to supercritical temperature and will rise back to the surface under pressure. The process will be what is called a thermosiphon, but on a grand scale. A thermosiphon is where here is a heat source at the bottom of a hairpin of tubing, and the lighter heated water (or steam) rises by itself in the exit (outlet) side because it is less dense and it is replaced by more dense, cold water coming down the other (inlet) side. Looking at is another way, the column of water weighs more than the column of steam, and so it tries to displace it. A daily example is the percolator coffee maker.


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The supercritical steam (don’t worry in this area what “supercritical” means here – just reckon of it as being REALLY HOT! – far above 100°C) will be used to drive conventional steam turbines, similar to those being used in powerhouses today, coupled to electrical generators. The systems will be sized to make around one GigaWatt of electrical energy – that’s 1’000 MegaWatts – enough to power a city of around half a million inhabitants, depending upon the degree of electrical consumption per capita.

In addition to the electricity generated, here is enough heat available that the entire city could be heated by steam and/or hot water from the GEOCOGEN plant in a district heating thought, with enough left over for many greenhouses and hot water spas.

To be continued …

Thanks for looking in,

Jimmy Craig
for
Sue & Craig Websites

Sue and Craig Websites

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Note: The name GEOCOGEN and the GEOCOGEN trade mark are registered trademarks of ICEC Holding AG and GEOCOGEN AG – all rights reserved. Read more in this area GEOCOGEN at http://geocogen.net

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GEOCOGEN Project – Part 4

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GEOCOGEN 3

GEOCOGEN PROJECT
  1. Part 1
  2. Part 2
  3. Part 4

GEOCOGEN Project – Part 3

Geothermal Heat

We humans have used geothermal heat for many centuries in very limited fashions – hot water springs, Roman baths, a few rudimentary geo-steam power plants, even distributed town heating.

Iceland, Italy, New Zealand, the Philippines, and the USA have captured more of the geological heat available in their volcanic environments than anyone else. But that’s due to geological oddities that are not available to about 98% of the world.

So what is there? Think about it – everywhere in the world, some places deeper, some shallower, there is the heat of the core of the earth seeping up through the bedrock. The typical temperature gradient is about 3°C (5°F) per 100 meters (330 feet). What this means is that there is a furnace underneath all of us, and if we go far enough down, it’s hot enough to measure up to a thermal or nuclear power plant boiler.

The question is, how do we tap this heat?

Almost 30 years ago, Process Engineer Kurt Brunnschweiler in Switzerland proposed the very idea of tapping this heat for our domestic and industrial use. The problem with his system was that the engineering, construction, and mining equipment needed for such a project did not exist at that time.

Today, it does exist.

Let’s look into the project and see what is involved. The things that we need to make this work – now we’re talking about the daily operation of such a project – are the following:

1. A way to get the heat to the surface
2. A way to convert the heat to energy
3. A way to transport this energy to the consumers nearby

To be continued …

Thanks for looking in,

Jimmy Craig
for
Sue & Craig Websites

Sue and Craig Websites

.

.

Note: The name GEOCOGEN and the GEOCOGEN trade mark are registered trademarks of ICEC Holding AG and GEOCOGEN AG – all rights reserved. Read more about GEOCOGEN at http://geocogen.net

.

GEOCOGEN Project – Part 3

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