Remember Me
forgot your password?

Introduction to Geothermal Energy

Our earth's interior - like the sun - provides heat energy from nature. This heat - geothermal energy - yields warmth and power that we can use without polluting the environment.
Geothermal heat originates from Earth's fiery consolidation of dust and gas over 4 billion years ago. At earth's core - 4,000 miles deep - temperatures may reach over 9,000 degrees F.
The heat from the earth's core continuously flows outward. It transfers (conducts) to the surrounding layer of rock, the mantle. When temperatures and pressures become high enough, some mantle rock melts, becoming magma. Then, because it is lighter (less dense) than the surrounding rock, the magma rises (convects), moving slowly up toward the earth's crust, carrying the heat from below.
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.
In the United States there are enough geothermal power plants to generate electricity and power for three and a half million homes (two thousand seven hundred megawatts).
How We Use Geothermal Energy Today:
Today we drill wells into the geothermal reservoirs to bring the hot water to the surface. Geologists, geochemists, drillers and engineers do a lot of exploring and testing to locate underground areas that contain this geothermal water, so we'll know where to drill geothermal production wells. Then, once the hot water and/or steam travels up the wells to the surface, they can be used to generate electricity in geothermal power plants or for energy saving non-electrical purposes.
In geothermal power plants steam, heat or hot water from geothermal reservoirs provides the force that spins the turbine generators and produces electricity. The used geothermal water is then returned down an injection well into the reservoir to be reheated, to maintain pressure, and to sustain the reservoir.
There are two types of power plants: a Flash Steam Power Plant and a Binary Cycle Power Plant.

Flash Steam Power Plant:
Flash steam plants are the most common type of geothermal power generation plants in operation today. They use water at temperatures greater than 360° F (182° C) that is pumped under high pressure to the generation equipment at the surface. Upon reaching the generation equipment the pressure is suddenly reduced, allowing some of the hot water to convert or "flash" into steam. This steam is then used to power the turbine/generator units to produce electricity. The remaining hot water not flashed into steam, and the water condensed from the steam is generally pumped back into the reservoir.

Binary System:

In the Binary system, the water from the geothermal reservoir is used to heat another "working fluid" which is vaporized and used to turn the turbine/generator units. The geothermal water, and the "working fluid" are each confined in separate circulating systems or "closed loops" and never come in contact with each other. The advantage of the Binary Cycle plant is that they can operate with lower temperature waters (225° F - 360° F), by using working fluids that have an even lower boiling point than water. They also produce no air emissions.
Is It A Viable, Long-Term Solution For The Future?

Environmental Issues:
There are little to no emissions
Geothermal power plants, like wind and solar power plants, do not have to burn fuels to manufacture steam to turn the turbines. Generating electricity with geothermal energy helps to conserve nonrenewable fossil fuels, and by decreasing the use of these fuels, we reduce emissions that harm our atmosphere.
It is environmentally friendly
Geothermal installations don't require damming of rivers or harvesting of forests -- and there are no mine shafts, tunnels, open pits, waste heaps or oil spills.

Technological Issues:
The power plants are reliable
Geothermal power plants are designed to run 24 hours a day, all year. A geothermal power plant sits right on top of its fuel source. It is resistant to interruptions of power generation due to weather, natural disasters or political rifts that can interrupt transportation of fuels.
The power plants have flexibility
Geothermal power plants can have modular designs, with additional units installed in increments when needed to fit growing demand for electricity.
Geothermal energy can be extracted from anywhere there are hot spots, U.S. to Third-World
Geothermal projects can offer all of the above benefits to help developing countries grow without pollution. And installations in remote locations can raise the standard of living and quality of life by bringing electricity to people far from "electrified" population centers.

Thousands more megawatts of power than are currently being produced could be developed from already-identified hydrothermal resources. With improvements in technology, much more power will become available.

Usable geothermal resources will not be limited to the "shallow" hydrothermal reservoirs at the crustal plate boundaries. Much of the world is underlain (3-6 miles down), by hot dry rock - no water, but lots of heat. Scientists in the U.S.A., Japan, England, France, Germany and Belgium have experimented with piping water into this deep hot rock to create more hydrothermal resources for use in geothermal power plants.

As drilling technology improves, allowing us to drill much deeper, geothermal energy from hot dry rock could be available anywhere. At such time, we will be able to tap the true potential of the enormous heat resources of the earth's crust.

Cem Ozcan

C. Ozcan - is the author for Site Insaat Inc. Please visit Istanbul Construction Guide at Site Insaat for more information about Turkey architects contractors and construction companies in Istanbul, Turkey.

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Science Articles
  • More from Cem Ozcan

Global warming

By: aryan | 24/11/2009
The process, which increases the temperature of air in the lower stage of atmosphere by the reason of green house effects and pollution, is called global warming.

Top 10 Most Unique Plants in the world

By: smart110 | 24/11/2009
This World have a lot of uniqueness, some of them with the plants. Here's some of the most unique plants in the world

ZOX Brain Power System - Photographic Memory Speed Reading Ultimate Brain Power

By: Dimitar Mishev | 23/11/2009
Are you ready to have creative new ideas? Invent things, write stories, think new thoughts, and be the life of the conversation - just use the powerful techniques from ZOX Brain power system.

Chess and Geometry – Teaching Kindergarten Chess

By: Frank Ho | 23/11/2009
After researching the relationship between chess and math for over 10 years, I conjecture that chess is a geometry-based game, which particularly is related to the concept of symmetry. So the way to teach a very young child is perhaps to point out the meaning of symmetry in a practical way, not in a conceptual way. How young can a child learn chess?

In the Quran: Allah Has Created every Creeping Creature from Water

By: Prof.dr. Ibrahim Khalil | 22/11/2009
The Noble Quran says that Allah has created every creeping creature from water. Among them are some that creep upon their bellies and among them are some that walk on two feet, and among them are some that walk on four.

Sustainability for climate change

By: kaushik shandilya | 22/11/2009
Energy quality is a type of energy accounting, a balance sheet of energy return on energy invested. The energy quality of oil is extraordinarily large.

Chemical detection of Aflatoxins in dairy products

By: Fereshteh Safarzadeh Markhali | 22/11/2009
High performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) is a widely used analytical technique. It allows samples to be separated and their components determined.

Printable Food Pyramid

By: Melayu | 21/11/2009
Print this page to make healthy food pyramid diagram without Coloring Pages, a way to encourage your child to their attitude towards healthy eating habits and styles.

Anxiety in Learning a Language

By: Cem Ozcan | 18/07/2007 | Self Help
Some people come across with many difficulties when learning a second language.It is believed that there are some emotional factors in foreign language learning which affect our learning abilities.These are mainly thought to be intelligence, motivation, attitudes and anxiety.

Fenstad’s Mother

By: Cem Ozcan | 18/07/2007 | Writing
In the story, Fenstad’s Mother, by Charles Baxter, characters take our attention to the story and we as readers try to understand them. The characters’ actions and the things they say are controlled by the author, of course, just like everything else in the story is controlled.

The Demon Lover

By: Cem Ozcan | 18/07/2007 | Writing
Conflict is one of the most important elements of stories, novels and plays because it causes the action. In order to discover what the story is really about, it is important to examine those conflicts to find some ideas and themes. Conflict that exists totally within a person is called inner-conflict.

Wind Energy

By: Cem Ozcan | 18/07/2007 | Science
Wind energy is a converted form of solar energy. The sun's radiation heats different parts of the earth at different rates—most notably during the day and night, but also when different surfaces (for example, water and land) absorb or reflect at different rates.

Seafloor Mapping in Solar

By: Cem Ozcan | 18/07/2007 | Science
The ocean is a part of the biological component of the earth in which living creatures like man depend greatly on its resources.. The ocean covers about three fourths of the earth land or about 71% from all of its corners.

Tidal Power: Wave of the Future?

By: Cem Ozcan | 18/07/2007 | Science
Tidal power is using the tides to extract energy to convert into electricity. The tides are the result of the gravitational force between the Earth and Moon. On a daily basis this force pulls up tons of water, thus the tides.

The Biomass Program and Posibilities for the Future

By: Cem Ozcan | 27/06/2007 | Science
Researchers are working on new technology that will be able to do hydrolysis of cellulosic biomass to sugars and lignins and also the thermochemical conversion of biomass to synthesis gas for fermentation and catalysis of these platform chemicals to produce slates of biopolymers and fuels.

Orange Revolution

By: Cem Ozcan | 27/06/2007 | College & University
The Orange Revolution in Ukraine in the latter part of 2004 consists of a series of protests and other events and actions related to allegations of massive corruption in the government which was then led by the former President, Yanukovich.

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.52, 5, w2)