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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-1634
    Keywords: Geothermal heat pipe ; upstreaming, stability ; solution selection ; boundary conditions ; steady state ; two-phase counterflow
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Technology
    Notes: Abstract In a geothermal reservoir, the heat pipe mechanism can transfer heat very efficiently, with vapor rising and liquid falling in comparable quantities, driven by gravity. For a given heat and mass flux that is not too large, there are two possible steady solutions with vapor-liquid counterflow, one liquid-dominated, and one vapor-dominated. Numerical solution of the equations for two-phase vertical counterflow displays intriguing stability behaviour. If pressure and saturation are fixed at depth, and heat and mass flux specified at the top, the vapor-dominated solution is almost always obtained. That is, for a variety of boundary values, the solution settles to the vapor-dominated steady-state, and only for very special values is it possible to obtain the liquid-dominated case. Similarly the liquid-dominated solution is almost always obtained if the boundary conditions are reversed, with pressure and saturation fixed at the top and heat and mass flux specified at depth. This behaviour is here explained in two complementary ways. It is shown to be a consequence of upstream differencing of the flow terms in the numerical method. It is also shown to be expected behaviour for wavelike saturation solutions. Hence the observed behaviour is not only a direct consequence of the numerical method used, but is fundamental to geothermal heat pipes.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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