Multi-Sensor Seismic Processing Approach using Geophones and HWC DAS in the Monitoring of CO2 Storage at the Hellisheiði Geothermal Field in Iceland

Journal Article (2024)
Authors

Cinzia Bellezza (Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e Geofisica Sperimentale)

Erika Barison (Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e Geofisica Sperimentale)

Biancamaria Farina (Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e Geofisica Sperimentale)

Flavio Poletto (Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e Geofisica Sperimentale)

Fabio Meneghini (Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e Geofisica Sperimentale)

Gualtiero Böhm (Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e Geofisica Sperimentale)

D.S. Draganov (TU Delft - Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics)

Martijn Janssen (TU Delft - Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics)

Gijs van Otten (Seismic Mechatronics)

G.B. More authors (External organisation)

Research Group
Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics
Copyright
© 2024 Cinzia Bellezza, Erika Barison, Biancamaria Farina, Flavio Poletto, Fabio Meneghini, Gualtiero Böhm, D.S. Draganov, M.T.G. Janssen, Gijs van Otten, More Authors
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.3390/su16020877
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Copyright
© 2024 Cinzia Bellezza, Erika Barison, Biancamaria Farina, Flavio Poletto, Fabio Meneghini, Gualtiero Böhm, D.S. Draganov, M.T.G. Janssen, Gijs van Otten, More Authors
Research Group
Applied Geophysics and Petrophysics
Issue number
2
Volume number
16
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3390/su16020877
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Abstract

Geothermal power production may result in significant CO2 emissions as part of the produced steam. CO2 capture, utilisation, subsurface storage (CCUS) and developments to exploit geothermal resources are focal points for future clean and renewable energy strategies. The Synergetic Utilisation of CO2 Storage Coupled with Geothermal Energy Deployment (SUCCEED) project aims to demonstrate the feasibility of using produced CO2 for re-injection in the geothermal field to improve geothermal performance, while also storing the CO2 as an action for climate change mitigation. Our study has the aim to develop innovative reservoir-monitoring technologies via active-source seismic data acquisition using a novel electric seismic vibrator source and permanently installed helically wound cable (HWC) fibre-optic distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) system. Implemented together with auxiliary multi-component (3C and 2C) geophone receiver arrays, this approach gave us the opportunity to compare and cross-validate the results using wavefields from different acquisition systems. We present the results of the baseline survey of a time-lapse monitoring project at the Hellisheiði geothermal field in Iceland. We perform tomographic inversion and multichannel seismic processing to investigate both the shallower and the deeper basaltic rocks targets. The wavefield analysis is supported by seismic modelling. The HWC DAS and the geophone-stacked sections show good consistency, highlighting the same reflection zones. The comparison of the new DAS technology with the well-known standard geophone acquisition proves the effectiveness and reliability of using broadside sensitivity HWC DAS in surface monitoring applications.