Helium isotopes reveal hidden stores of geothermal energy.
Most geothermal power plants exploit the relatively rare but easy to spot hot water associated with volcanoes, limiting geothermal energy to a niche role in meeting global energy demand. It works well in Iceland and a few other places, but geothermal energy is a largely untapped resource in much of the world, in part because, in the absence of a volcano or hot springs, it's hard to find the right spot to tap into the resource. Last week, a pair of geochemists published a report in Science showing that the ultrasensitive detection of traces of helium at the surface using mass spectrometers may hold the key to sniffing out the best sites of this hidden heat.
Mack Kennedy, a senior scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, in Berkeley, CA, and coauthor Matthijs van Soest, an associate research professional at Arizona State University's School of Earth and Space Exploration, in Tempe, measured the levels of helium isotopes to predict areas where the rock is permeable deep underground. Water is more likely to circulate rapidly through such regions, providing the circulation of heat emanating from the earth's mantle or generated in its crust by radioactive decay. "You have a huge resource, and now I can tell you where there's good permeability," says Kennedy. "Those are places to go look for a natural geothermal system right off the bat."
The findings could be an important step in efforts to unlock the vast potential of geothermal energy, in which heated water produces steam to drive power-generating turbines. According to a recent expert panel analysis for the Department of Energy (DOE), led by researchers at MIT and Southern Methodist University, in Texas, geothermal systems engineered to exploit hot rocks could be meeting 10 percent of U.S. electricity demand within 50 years. Currently, geothermal systems supply less than 1 percent of that demand. One challenge to further exploiting geothermal energy has been pinpointing exactly where to look for rocks with the right combination of permeability and heat. And that's where the new study could help.
http://www.technologyreview.com/Energy/19891/
Saturday, January 26, 2008
Prospecting for Power
Posted by Chart Smart at 3:13 PM
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