Mapping Fracture Network Creation with Microseismicity During EGS Demonstrations

This a report for the project "Mapping Fracture Network Creation with Microseismicity During EGS Demonstrations". Effective enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) require optimal fracture networks for efficient heat transfer between hot rock and fluid. Microseismic mapping is a key tool used to infer the subsurface fracture geometry. Traditional earthquake detection and location techniques are often employed to identify microearthquakes in geothermal regions. However, most commonly used algorithms may miss events if the seismic signal of an earthquake is small relative to the background noise level or if a microearthquake occurs within the coda of a larger event. Consequently, we have developed a set of algorithms that provide improved microearthquake detection. Our objective is to investigate the microseismicity at the DOE Newberry EGS site to better image the active regions of the underground fracture network during and immediately after the EGS stimulation. Detection of more microearthquakes during EGS stimulations will allow for better seismic delineation of the active regions of the underground fracture system. This improved knowledge of the reservoir network will improve our understanding of subsurface conditions, and allow improvement of the stimulation strategy that will optimize heat extraction and maximize economic return.

This project is the FY14 continuation of FY13 AOP project 25728, which had its origins as the ARRA lab project AID 19981.

Data and Resources

Field Value
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identifier https://data.openei.org/submissions/3249
issued 2014-04-18T06:00:00Z
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modified 2017-06-22T22:35:06Z
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programCode {019:006}
projectLead Lauren Boyd
projectNumber FY14 AOP 1.1.0.19
publisher Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • algorithm
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • ckan
  • egs
  • fracture
  • fracture-creation
  • fracturing
  • geo
  • geoss
  • geothermal
  • mapping
  • microseismic
  • microseismicity
  • national
  • newberry
  • north-america
  • united-states
isopen True
license_id cc-by
license_title Creative Commons Attribution
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maintainer Dennise Templeton
maintainer_email templeton4@llnl.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-21T15:43:31.873957
metadata_modified 2025-11-21T15:43:31.873961
notes This a report for the project "Mapping Fracture Network Creation with Microseismicity During EGS Demonstrations". Effective enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) require optimal fracture networks for efficient heat transfer between hot rock and fluid. Microseismic mapping is a key tool used to infer the subsurface fracture geometry. Traditional earthquake detection and location techniques are often employed to identify microearthquakes in geothermal regions. However, most commonly used algorithms may miss events if the seismic signal of an earthquake is small relative to the background noise level or if a microearthquake occurs within the coda of a larger event. Consequently, we have developed a set of algorithms that provide improved microearthquake detection. Our objective is to investigate the microseismicity at the DOE Newberry EGS site to better image the active regions of the underground fracture network during and immediately after the EGS stimulation. Detection of more microearthquakes during EGS stimulations will allow for better seismic delineation of the active regions of the underground fracture system. This improved knowledge of the reservoir network will improve our understanding of subsurface conditions, and allow improvement of the stimulation strategy that will optimize heat extraction and maximize economic return. This project is the FY14 continuation of FY13 AOP project 25728, which had its origins as the ARRA lab project AID 19981.
num_resources 1
num_tags 18
title Mapping Fracture Network Creation with Microseismicity During EGS Demonstrations