Abstract

Underground Thermal Energy Storage systems have showed to be a useful and increasing technical solution for covering heating and cooling and domestic hot water buildings' demand. Thermal influence of these plants is however not still debated as it deserves and correct monitoring strategies appear to be of major importance both to better understand processes and to highlight their environmental effects into high populated areas. Litho-, hydro- and bio-sphere can indeed be adversely affected by temperature variations induced in the underground by heat storage applications. For this purpose, a geophysical monitoring approach using time-lapse electrical resistivity measurements contemporary to analogical simulations is here tested at laboratory scale. Results of the experiments are reported comparing measured apparent resistivity with direct temperature measurements and numerical simulations of heat propagation. Data presented confirmed that electrical resistivity has powerful relation with temperature variation in monitored media. In addition, they showed that also without performing data inversion valid temperature estimation can be carried out. Post-processing calibration of apparent resistivity data showed to be in acceptable agreement with both temperature measurements and numerical simulations. Simple apparent electrical resistivity variations appear therefore to be a promising, economic, quick and non-invasive tool for mapping thermal modifications induced in the underground by shallow geothermal applications.

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