Evaluation of the conditions that impact the spreading, impact and groundwater monitoring for the risk of brine leakage from wells into fresh groundwater aquifers

Contamination of fresh groundwater aquifers by leakage of saline water (brine) from wells may result from various activities, such as salt mining, wastewater or concentrate injection and geothermal heat production. Here, the brine transport and consequences for groundwater monitoring have been explored for a wide range of brine compositions, leakage and hydrogeological conditions using numerical simulations that considered buoyancy impacts from both temperature and density differences. Results show that at close distances to the leak (up to 3-5 meters away), breakthroughs of the salt ( at 1,000 mg/L) occurred within one month of leakage in all modelled scenarios. At a radial distance of 10 meters, with a leak rate of 2 m3 /d, it took three to six months in most cases. For the leakage of relatively warm brines, the heat transport is separated from the salinity due to thermal retardation resulting in monitoring the breakthrough of heat more closely to the depth of the leakage point than the salinity breakthrough. In summary, this study indicates that the mode of dispersion of leaking geothermal brine strongly depends on the brine properties and the leakage and hydrogeological conditions. At the same time, vertical monitoring of temperature and conductivity at a limited distance from brine injection wells (<5m) appears to be a robust method for detecting a possible leak relatively quickly (within a month) and after limited contamination. The monitoring signal in the event of leakage is also sufficiently distinctive to prevent false positives.

Presenter Name
Niels
Presenter Surname
Hartog
Area
The Netherlands
Conference year
2023