date: 2020-05-24T20:25:24Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.5 pdf:docinfo:title: The Horizon 2020 Project SURE: Deliverable 6.3 - Report on field scale RJD stimulation for the magmatic site xmp:CreatorTool: Microsoft® Word 2013 dc:description: This report describes activity connected to radial jet drilling (RJD) in Iceland in WP6 ? Macro Scale in the SURE project. Well HN-13, located in N-Iceland close to the town of Akureyri was selected as a candidate for RJD trials within the SURE project. It was drilled in between two prior drilled low-temperature geothermal wells, HG-10 (a.k.a. HN-10) and BO-01 (a.k.a. BN-01), that are both productive and used for district heating of Akureyri and nearby communities. Although the location was in between two producing wells, it was a poor producer only producing 5-6 liters per minute (0,1 l/s) while being air lifted. For comparison, the mean production from well HG-10 that sits 20 m NNE of HN-13, is about 25 l/s of 90°C hot water. HN-13 was therefore valued as an excellent candidate for demonstration of the stimulation technology, as any increased production after RJD will clearly be revealed. Jetting experiments in WP5 into basalt rock types sent from Iceland to Bochum were shown to be impractical as high pressure and velocities are required. Therefore, softer inter-basaltic layers were targeted. Main information on well HN-13, nearby wells, target depth as well as the RJD field testing are described in this report. Keywords: access_permission:modify_annotations: true access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: This report describes activity connected to radial jet drilling (RJD) in Iceland in WP6 ? Macro Scale in the SURE project. Well HN-13, located in N-Iceland close to the town of Akureyri was selected as a candidate for RJD trials within the SURE project. It was drilled in between two prior drilled low-temperature geothermal wells, HG-10 (a.k.a. HN-10) and BO-01 (a.k.a. BN-01), that are both productive and used for district heating of Akureyri and nearby communities. Although the location was in between two producing wells, it was a poor producer only producing 5-6 liters per minute (0,1 l/s) while being air lifted. For comparison, the mean production from well HG-10 that sits 20 m NNE of HN-13, is about 25 l/s of 90°C hot water. HN-13 was therefore valued as an excellent candidate for demonstration of the stimulation technology, as any increased production after RJD will clearly be revealed. Jetting experiments in WP5 into basalt rock types sent from Iceland to Bochum were shown to be impractical as high pressure and velocities are required. Therefore, softer inter-basaltic layers were targeted. Main information on well HN-13, nearby wells, target depth as well as the RJD field testing are described in this report. dc:creator: G. description: This report describes activity connected to radial jet drilling (RJD) in Iceland in WP6 ? Macro Scale in the SURE project. Well HN-13, located in N-Iceland close to the town of Akureyri was selected as a candidate for RJD trials within the SURE project. It was drilled in between two prior drilled low-temperature geothermal wells, HG-10 (a.k.a. HN-10) and BO-01 (a.k.a. BN-01), that are both productive and used for district heating of Akureyri and nearby communities. Although the location was in between two producing wells, it was a poor producer only producing 5-6 liters per minute (0,1 l/s) while being air lifted. For comparison, the mean production from well HG-10 that sits 20 m NNE of HN-13, is about 25 l/s of 90°C hot water. HN-13 was therefore valued as an excellent candidate for demonstration of the stimulation technology, as any increased production after RJD will clearly be revealed. Jetting experiments in WP5 into basalt rock types sent from Iceland to Bochum were shown to be impractical as high pressure and velocities are required. Therefore, softer inter-basaltic layers were targeted. Main information on well HN-13, nearby wells, target depth as well as the RJD field testing are described in this report. dcterms:created: 2019-09-13T14:08:49Z Last-Modified: 2020-05-24T20:25:24Z dcterms:modified: 2020-05-24T20:25:24Z dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.5 title: The Horizon 2020 Project SURE: Deliverable 6.3 - Report on field scale RJD stimulation for the magmatic site xmpMM:DocumentID: uuid:e95f4c6b-21be-d346-b5e8-f293b7e75969 Last-Save-Date: 2020-05-24T20:25:24Z pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: Microsoft® Word 2013 access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:docinfo:keywords: pdf:docinfo:modified: 2020-05-24T20:25:24Z meta:save-date: 2020-05-24T20:25:24Z pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: The Horizon 2020 Project SURE: Deliverable 6.3 - Report on field scale RJD stimulation for the magmatic site modified: 2020-05-24T20:25:24Z cp:subject: This report describes activity connected to radial jet drilling (RJD) in Iceland in WP6 ? Macro Scale in the SURE project. Well HN-13, located in N-Iceland close to the town of Akureyri was selected as a candidate for RJD trials within the SURE project. It was drilled in between two prior drilled low-temperature geothermal wells, HG-10 (a.k.a. HN-10) and BO-01 (a.k.a. BN-01), that are both productive and used for district heating of Akureyri and nearby communities. Although the location was in between two producing wells, it was a poor producer only producing 5-6 liters per minute (0,1 l/s) while being air lifted. For comparison, the mean production from well HG-10 that sits 20 m NNE of HN-13, is about 25 l/s of 90°C hot water. HN-13 was therefore valued as an excellent candidate for demonstration of the stimulation technology, as any increased production after RJD will clearly be revealed. Jetting experiments in WP5 into basalt rock types sent from Iceland to Bochum were shown to be impractical as high pressure and velocities are required. Therefore, softer inter-basaltic layers were targeted. Main information on well HN-13, nearby wells, target depth as well as the RJD field testing are described in this report. pdf:docinfo:subject: This report describes activity connected to radial jet drilling (RJD) in Iceland in WP6 ? Macro Scale in the SURE project. Well HN-13, located in N-Iceland close to the town of Akureyri was selected as a candidate for RJD trials within the SURE project. It was drilled in between two prior drilled low-temperature geothermal wells, HG-10 (a.k.a. HN-10) and BO-01 (a.k.a. BN-01), that are both productive and used for district heating of Akureyri and nearby communities. Although the location was in between two producing wells, it was a poor producer only producing 5-6 liters per minute (0,1 l/s) while being air lifted. For comparison, the mean production from well HG-10 that sits 20 m NNE of HN-13, is about 25 l/s of 90°C hot water. HN-13 was therefore valued as an excellent candidate for demonstration of the stimulation technology, as any increased production after RJD will clearly be revealed. Jetting experiments in WP5 into basalt rock types sent from Iceland to Bochum were shown to be impractical as high pressure and velocities are required. Therefore, softer inter-basaltic layers were targeted. Main information on well HN-13, nearby wells, target depth as well as the RJD field testing are described in this report. Content-Type: application/pdf pdf:docinfo:creator: Kaldal X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: G. meta:author: G. dc:subject: meta:creation-date: 2019-09-13T14:08:49Z created: Fri Sep 13 16:08:49 CEST 2019 access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 76 Creation-Date: 2019-09-13T14:08:49Z access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true meta:keyword: Author: G. producer: Microsoft® Word 2013 access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:producer: Microsoft® Word 2013 pdf:docinfo:created: 2019-09-13T14:08:49Z