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  4. An urban energy laboratory for monitoring and better understanding of subsurface processes related to low-enthalpy geothermal heat production - UrbEnLab
 
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2026
Journal Article
Title

An urban energy laboratory for monitoring and better understanding of subsurface processes related to low-enthalpy geothermal heat production - UrbEnLab

Abstract
Low-enthalpy geothermal heat production is becoming increasingly common, which leads to the potentially competitive use of the available subsurface space, especially in densely populated urban areas. A specific challenge presented by the high density of different geothermal systems is understanding the details of convective and conductive heat flow processes and detailed monitoring of properties and processes in the subsurface. On the TU Delft campus, we aim to drill a borehole of around 4.5 km depth to be used for the exploration, observation, and monitoring of subsurface processes that will be part of a larger research infrastructure under development. This so-called urban energy laboratory includes - in addition to the deep multi-use borehole - a well-instrumented geothermal doublet drilled in 2023, reaching to a depth of 2.2 km; a local seismic monitoring system (installed in 2022); an ultra-sensitive portable seismic monitoring array; and a high-temperature aquifer heat storage system (HT-ATES), for which a pilot well was drilled in 2024. With this urban energy laboratory, we want to tackle problems and better understand processes related to multiple and/or competing subsurface uses in urban environments. The deep exploration and monitoring borehole is designed specifically to monitor fluid and/or flux movement in 3D with unprecedented precision, aiming to understand the propagation of the geothermal cold front and reservoir pressures. During the 3 d International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP)-sponsored UrbEnLab workshop, 75 scientists from 17 countries met in Delft, the Netherlands, in June 2024 to prioritize the scientific ambitions of the deep exploration and monitoring borehole and to discuss potential techniques that could be applied to tackle them. Assessing the life cycle of a geothermal system situated in a complex heterogeneous sedimentary system was defined as the broad aim, with revealing the detailed flow field established being a key priority.
Author(s)
Bruhn, David  orcid-logo
Fraunhofer-Einrichtung für Energieinfrastrukturen und Geotechnologien IEG  
Abels, Hemmo A.
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Barnhoorn, Auke
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Bossennec, Claire
Université de Lille
Braiden, Aoife K.
Research Management and Logistics Ltd
Brehme, Maren
Chassagne, Romain
BRGM
Daniilidis, Alexandros
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Darnet, Mathieu
BRGM
Drijkoningen, Guy
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Fulton, Patrick
Cornell University
Harcouët-Menou, Virginie
Vlaamse Instelling voor Technologisch Onderzoek
Huenges, Ernst
Klimainitiative Schwielowsee e.V.
Jansen, Stefan
Deltares
Koulidis, Alexis
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Laumann, Susanne
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Lei, Haiyan
Tianjin University
Moore, Joseph
The University of Utah
Rulff, Paula
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Schöfisch, Thorben
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Slob, Evert
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Vardon, Philip J.
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Vargas-Meleza, Liliana
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Voskov, Denis
TU Delft, Department of Geoscience & Engineering
Journal
Scientific drilling  
Open Access
File(s)
Download (2.39 MB)
Rights
CC BY 4.0: Creative Commons Attribution
DOI
10.5194/sd-35-83-2026
10.24406/publica-8387
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Einrichtung für Energieinfrastrukturen und Geotechnologien IEG  
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