Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/20402

Title: Abstraction and use of groundwater for heating buildings in a hard rock environment
Authors: Chambel, António
Duque, Jorge
Editors: Iurkiewicz, Adrian
Popa, Iulian
Keywords: Groundwater
geothermy
Low enthalpy
heating
urban areas
hard rocks
Issue Date: 2016
Abstract: In order to turn more efficient the heating of class rooms in the lower floor of the old building of the University of Évora (a XVI century building), five drillings were organised inside the area of the university (Figure 1). The purpose was to use the temperature differential of groundwater in relation to air, by means of a heat exchanger, and use this process to heat the rooms using less energy, turning the heating process less expensive. The wells were drilled in fractured rocks (gneisses), and the purpose was to locate them at least around 100 m one from each other, whilst trying to have a hydraulic connection in-between. From the five initial wells, four were successful in terms of productivity, but just two of them (RA1 and RA2) proved to be hydraulically connected. The wells were equipped with screens for all their drilled depth (100 m), except for the first six meters and some two or three pipes of six meters each, to allow space for the installation for submersible pumps. The length of the installed screens guarantees a good efficiency of the system. In the wells with no connection, the heating system can work using each single well for abstraction and injection, but the process is much less efficient than in the cases where interaction between wells is possible through the rock’s fracture network.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/20402
Type: article
Appears in Collections:ICT - Artigos em Livros de Actas/Proceedings

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