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Heat From The Earth
About Geothermal Energy
by Andrew Alden
As the costs of fuel and electricity rise, geothermal energy has a
promising future.
Underground heat can be found anywhere on Earth, not just where oil is
pumped, coal is mined, where the sun shines or where the wind blows.
And it produces around the clock, all the time, with relatively little
management needed.
Here's how geothermal energy works.
Geothermal Gradients
No matter where you are, if you drill down through the Earth's crust
you will eventually hit red-hot rock.
Miners first noticed in the Middle Ages that deep mines are warm at
the bottom, and careful measurements since that time have found that once you
get past surface fluctuations, solid rock grows steadily warmer with depth.
On average, this geothermal gradient is
about one degree Celsius for every 40 meters in depth or 25 C per kilometer.
But averages are just averages. In detail, the geothermal gradient is
much higher and lower in different places.
High gradients require one of two things: hot magma rising close to
the surface, or abundant cracks allowing groundwater to carry heat efficiently
to the surface.
Either one is sufficient for energy production, but having both is
best.
Spreading Zones
Magma rises where the crust is being stretched apart to let it rise —
in divergent zones.
This happens in the volcanic arcs above most subduction zones, for
instance, and in other areas of crustal extension.
The world's largest zone of extension is the mid-ocean ridge system,
where the famous, sizzling-hot black smokers are found.
It would be great if we could tap heat from the spreading ridges, but
that is possible in only two places, Iceland and the Salton Trough of
California (and Jan Mayen Land in the Arctic Ocean, where no one lives).
Areas of continental spreading are the next-best possibility.
Good examples are the Basin and Range region in the American West and
East Africa's Great Rift Valley.
Here there are many areas of hot rocks that overlie young magma
intrusions.
The heat is available if we can get to it by drilling, then start
extracting the heat by pumping water through the hot rock.
Fracture Zones
Hot springs and geysers throughout the Basin and Range point to the
importance of fractures.
Without the fractures, there is no hot spring, only hidden potential.
Fractures support hot springs in many other places where the crust is
not stretching.
The famous Warm Springs in Georgia is an example, a place where no
lava has flowed in 200 million years.
Steam Fields
The very best places to tap geothermal heat have high temperatures and
abundant fractures.
Deep in the ground, the fracture spaces are filled with pure
superheated steam, while groundwater and minerals in the cooler zone above seal
in the pressure.
Tapping into one of these dry-steam zones is like having a giant steam
boiler handy that you can plug into a turbine to generate electricity.
The best place in the world for this is off limits — Yellowstone
National Park.
There are only three dry-steam fields producing power today:
Lardarello in Italy, Wairakei in New Zealand and The Geysers in California.
Other steam fields are wet — they produce boiling water as well as
steam.
Their efficiency is less than the dry-steam fields, but hundreds of
them are still making a profit. A major example is the Coso geothermal field in
eastern California.
Geothermal energy plants can be started in hot dry rock simply by
drilling down to it and fracturing it. Then water is pumped down to it and the
heat is harvested in steam or hot water.
Electricity is produced either by flashing the pressurized hot water
into steam at surface pressures or by using a second working fluid (such as
water or ammonia) in a separate plumbing system to extract and convert the
heat.
Novel compounds are under development as working fluids that could
boost efficiency enough to change the game.
Lesser Sources
Ordinary hot water is useful for energy even if it isn't suitable for
generating electricity.
The heat itself is useful in factory processes or just for heating
buildings.
The entire nation of Iceland is almost completely self-sufficient in
energy thanks to geothermal sources, both hot and warm, that do everything from
driving turbines to heating greenhouses.
Geothermal possibilities of all these kinds are shown in a national
map of geothermal potential issued on Google Earth in 2011.
The study that created this map estimated that America has ten times
as much geothermal potential as the energy in all of its coal beds.
Useful energy can be obtained even in shallow holes, where the ground
isn't hot.
Heat pumps can cool a building during summer and warm it during
winter, just by moving heat from whichever place is warmer.
Similar schemes work in lakes, where dense, cold water lies on the
lake bottom. Cornell University's lake source cooling system is a notable
example.
Earth's Heat Source
To a first approximation, Earth's heat comes from radioactive decay of
three elements: uranium, thorium, and potassium.
We think that the iron core has almost none of these, while
the overlying mantle has only small amounts.
The crust, just 1 percent of the Earth's bulk, holds
about half as much of these radiogenic elements as the whole mantle beneath it
(which is 67% of the Earth).
In effect, the crust acts like an electric blanket upon the rest of
the planet.
Lesser amounts of heat are produced by various physicochemical means:
freezing of liquid iron in the inner core, mineral phase changes, impacts from
outer space, friction from Earth tides and more.
And a significant amount of heat flows out of the Earth simply because
the planet is cooling.
The exact numbers for all these factors are highly uncertain because
the Earth's heat budget relies on details of the planet's structure, which is
still being discovered.
Also, Earth has evolved, and we cannot assume what its structure was
during the deep past.
Finally, plate-tectonic motions of the crust have been rearranging
that electric blanket for eons.
The Earth's heat budget is a contentious topic among specialists.
Thankfully, we can exploit geothermal energy without that knowledge.
Andrew
Alden
Professional
geologist, writer, photographer, and geological tour guide
Thirty-seven
years of experience writing about geological subjects
Six
years as a research guide with U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
Experience
Andrew
Alden is a former writer for ThoughtCo who contributed hundreds of
articles for more than 17 years. Andrew works as a geologist, writer, editor,
and photographer. He has written on geological subjects since 1981 and
participates actively in his field. For example, Andrew spent six years as a
research guide with the U.S.
Geological Survey, leading excursions on both land land and at sea. And
since 1992, he has hosted the earthquakes conference for the online discussion
platform, The Well, which began as a dialogue between the
writers and readers of the Whole Earth Review.
In
addition, Andrew is a longtime member of the member of the Geological Society of
America — an international society that serves members in
academia, government, and industry; and the American Geophysical Union — a community of
earth and space scientists that advances the power of science to ensure a
sustainable future.
Andrew
lives in Oakland, California; and though he writes about the whole planet
and beyond, Andrew finds his own city full of interest too and blogs about its
geology.
Education
Andrew
Alden holds a bachelor's (B.A.) degree in Earth Science from the
University of New Hampshire, College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, in
Durham, N.H.
Awards
and Publications
Andrew Alden on Earthquakes (The Well Group, Inc., 2011)
Assessment of River — Floodplain Aquifer Interactions (Environmental
and Engineering Geoscience, 1997)
Andrew
Alden on Hosting (The Well Group, Inc., 1995)
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