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Technische und wirtschaftliche Projektstudie zur Verwendung thermischer Verfahren zur Wasserstoffproduktion aus ausgeförderten ErdöllagerstättenBauer, Johannes Fabian 30 April 2024 (has links)
Erdöl und Erdgas liegen als flüssige Kohlenwasserstoffe in porösen Sedimentgesteinen im geologischen Untergrund vor. Um diese Kohlenwasserstoffe zu gewinnen, wird der Untergrund durch Tiefbohrungen zur Förderung erschlossen. Anschließend erfolgt die Förderung des Erdöls in drei Phasen: der Primär-, Sekundär- und Tertiärförderung. In der primären Phase wird Erdöl durch den Druck in der Lagerstätte gewonnen, in der sekundären Phase durch künstliche Aufrechterhaltung des Drucks und in der tertiären Phase durch technische Beeinflussung der strömungsmechanischen und thermodynamischen Eigenschaften des Erdöls. Dennoch verbleibt insbesondere bei Schweröllagerstätten ein Anteil von 45 bis 90 % des ursprünglich in der Lagerstätte vorhandenen Erdöls in der Lagerstätte. Aufgrund strömungsmechanischer und thermodynamischer Einschränkungen ist eine Gewinnung dieses Anteils technisch und/oder wirtschaftlich nicht möglich. Meist wird die Lagerstätte nach Abschluss der Förderung verfüllt und die übertägigen Anlagen zurückgebaut.
Zugleich steigt weltweit der Bedarf an Energiequellen, insbesondere an solchen, die für die Dekarbonisierung und Umstellung auf umweltschonende Energien benötigt werden. Wasserstoff wird voraussichtlich als chemischer Energieträger der zukünftige Schlüsselrohstoff für die Energiewende sein.
Diese Forschungsarbeit untersucht die Weiternutzung bzw. Erschließung ausgeförderter Erdöllagerstätten zur Wasserstoffgewinnungmittels thermischer Verfahren. Diese Verfahren orientieren sich an bereits etablierten Methoden für die übertägige Verfahrenstechnik. Durch das Verfahren wird die Lagerstätte mithilfe der Verbrennung des in dieser vorhandenen Restöls erhitzt und das entstehende Koks durch eine Wasserinjektion in Synthesegas umzuwandeln. Durch die hohen Temperaturen entsteht in der Lagerstätte eine Atmosphäre aus Wasserdampf, die zur Vergasung des Kokses führt. Das Gas wird durch die Wasserfront aus der Lagerstätte in die Produktionsbohrungen verdrängt und kann anschließend an der Oberfläche aufbereitet werden. Im Kontext der Lagerstättenprozesse entsteht nicht nur Wasserstoff, sondern auch weitere Verbrennungsprodukte wie Kohlenstoffmonoxid, Kohlenstoffdioxid, Sauergase und Kohlenwasserstoffgase. Diese werden verfahrenstechnisch aufbereitet und dampfreformiert in den obertägigen Anlagen. Zur Erfüllung der Anforderungen an blauen Wasserstoff ist die Reinjektion von Kohlenstoffdioxid erforderlich.
In der Dissertation wird ein numerisches Berechnungsschema eingeführt und ausführlich getestet, um die lagerstättentechnische Simulation der thermischen Wasserstoffgewinnung durchzuführen. Anhand von Modelllagerstätten werden mithilfe dieses Schemas relevante Prozessparameter ermittelt und für die Übertragung auf die konkrete Lagerstättensimulation aufbereitet. Das Verfahren zur Wasserstoffförderung wird an einer antiklinalen Lagerstätte mit geostatistischer Heterogenität simuliert. Die Ergebnisse werden zur weiteren Auswertung bezüglich Integritätsfragen, Übertageanlagen sowie wirtschaftlicher und strategischer Aspekte herangezogen.
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Topographie, Struktur und Dynamik thermisch aufgedampfter Polymerfilme / Topography, structure and dynamics of thermally evaporated polymer filmsVree, Christian 06 July 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Cooling of electrically insulated high voltage electrodes down to 30 mK / Kühlung von elektrisch isolierten Hochspannungselektroden bis 30 mKEisel, Thomas 07 November 2011 (has links) (PDF)
The Antimatter Experiment: Gravity, Interferometry, Spectroscopy (AEGIS) at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) is an experiment investigating the influence of earth’s gravitational force upon antimatter. To perform precise measurements the antimatter needs to be cooled to a temperature of 100 mK. This will be done in a Penning trap, formed by several electrodes, which are charged with several kV and have to be individually electrically insulated. The trap is thermally linked to a mixing chamber of a 3He-4He dilution refrigerator.
Two link designs are examined, the Rod design and the Sandwich design. The Rod design electrically connects a single electrode with a heat exchanger, immersed in the helium of the mixing chamber, by a copper pin. An alumina ring and the helium electrically insulate the Rod design. The Sandwich uses an electrically insulating sapphire plate sandwiched between the electrode and the mixing chamber. Indium layers on the sapphire plate are applied to improve the thermal contact. Four differently prepared test Sandwiches are investigated. They differ in the sapphire surface roughness and in the application method of the indium layers.
Measurements with static and sinusoidal heat loads are performed to uncover the behavior of the thermal boundary resistances. The thermal total resistance of the best Sandwich shows a temperature dependency of T-2,64 and is significantly lower, with roughly 30 cm2K4/W at 50 mK, than experimental data found in the literature. The estimated thermal boundary resistance between indium and sapphire agrees very well with the value of the acoustic mismatch theory at low temperatures.
In both designs, homemade heat exchangers are integrated to transfer the heat to the cold helium. These heat exchangers are based on sintered structures to increase the heat transferring surface and to overcome the significant influence of the thermal resistance (Kapitza resistance). The heat exchangers are optimized concerning the adherence of the sinter to the substrate and its sinter height, e.g. its thermal penetration length.
Ruthenium oxide metallic resistors (RuO2) are used as temperature sensors for the investigations. They consist of various materials, which affect the reproducibility. The sensor conditioning and the resulting good reproducibility is discussed as well.
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Cooling of electrically insulated high voltage electrodes down to 30 mKEisel, Thomas 04 October 2011 (has links)
The Antimatter Experiment: Gravity, Interferometry, Spectroscopy (AEGIS) at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) is an experiment investigating the influence of earth’s gravitational force upon antimatter. To perform precise measurements the antimatter needs to be cooled to a temperature of 100 mK. This will be done in a Penning trap, formed by several electrodes, which are charged with several kV and have to be individually electrically insulated. The trap is thermally linked to a mixing chamber of a 3He-4He dilution refrigerator.
Two link designs are examined, the Rod design and the Sandwich design. The Rod design electrically connects a single electrode with a heat exchanger, immersed in the helium of the mixing chamber, by a copper pin. An alumina ring and the helium electrically insulate the Rod design. The Sandwich uses an electrically insulating sapphire plate sandwiched between the electrode and the mixing chamber. Indium layers on the sapphire plate are applied to improve the thermal contact. Four differently prepared test Sandwiches are investigated. They differ in the sapphire surface roughness and in the application method of the indium layers.
Measurements with static and sinusoidal heat loads are performed to uncover the behavior of the thermal boundary resistances. The thermal total resistance of the best Sandwich shows a temperature dependency of T-2,64 and is significantly lower, with roughly 30 cm2K4/W at 50 mK, than experimental data found in the literature. The estimated thermal boundary resistance between indium and sapphire agrees very well with the value of the acoustic mismatch theory at low temperatures.
In both designs, homemade heat exchangers are integrated to transfer the heat to the cold helium. These heat exchangers are based on sintered structures to increase the heat transferring surface and to overcome the significant influence of the thermal resistance (Kapitza resistance). The heat exchangers are optimized concerning the adherence of the sinter to the substrate and its sinter height, e.g. its thermal penetration length.
Ruthenium oxide metallic resistors (RuO2) are used as temperature sensors for the investigations. They consist of various materials, which affect the reproducibility. The sensor conditioning and the resulting good reproducibility is discussed as well.
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Characterization of heterogeneous diffusion in confined soft matterTäuber, Daniela 26 October 2011 (has links) (PDF)
A new method, probability distribution of diffusivities (time scaled square displacements between succeeding video frames), was developed to analyze single molecule tracking (SMT) experiments. This method was then applied to SMT experiments on ultrathin liquid tetrakis(2-ethylhexoxy)silane (TEHOS) films on Si wafer with 100 nm thermally grown oxide, and on thin semectic liquid crystal films. Spatial maps of diffusivities from SMT experiments on 220 nm thick semectic liquid crystal films reveal structure related dynamics. The SMT experiments on ultrathin TEHOS films were complemented by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS). The observed strongly heterogeneous single molecule dynamics within those films can be explained by a three-layer model consisting of (i) dye molecules adsorbed to the substrate, (ii) slowly diffusing molecules in the laterally heterogeneous near-surface region of 1 - 2 molecular diameters, and (iii) freely diffusing dye molecules in the upper region of the film. FCS and SMT experiments reveal a strong influence of substrate heterogeneity on SM dynamics. Thereby chemisorption to substrate surface silanols plays an important role. Vertical mean first passage times (mfpt) in those films are below 1 µs. This appears as fast component in FCS autocorrelation curves, which further contain a contribution from lateral diffusion and from adsorption events. Therefore, the FCS curves are approximated by a tri-component function, which contains an exponential term related to the mfpt, the correlation function for translational diffusion and a stretched exponential term for the broad distribution of adsorption events. Lateral diffusion coefficients obtained by FCS on 10 nm thick TEHOS films, thereby, are effective diffusion coefficients from dye transients in the focal area. They strongly depend on the substrate heterogeneity. Variation of the frame times for the acquisition of SMT experiments in steps of 20 ms from 20 ms to 200 ms revealed a strong dependence of the corresponding probability distributions of diffusivities on time, in particular in the range between 20 ms and 100 ms. This points to average dwell times of the dye molecules in at least one type of the heterogeneous regions (e.g. on and above silanol clusters) in the range of few tens of milliseconds.
Furthermore, time series of SM spectra from Nile Red in 25 nm thick poly-n-alkyl-methacrylate (PnAMA) films were studied. In analogy to translational diffusion, spectral diffusion (shifts in energetic positions of SM spectra) can be studied by probability distributions of spectral diffusivities, i.e. time scaled square energetic displacements. Simulations were run and analyzed to study contributions from noise and fitting uncertainty to spectral diffusion. Furthermore the effect of spectral jumps during acquisition of a SM spectrum was investigated. Probability distributions of spectral diffusivites of Nile Red probing vitreous PnAMA films reveal a two-level system. In contrast, such probability distributions obtained from Nile Red within a 25 nm thick poly-n-butylmethacrylate film around glass transition and in the melt state, display larger spectral jumps. Moreover, for longer alkyl side chains a solvent shift to higher energies is observed, which supports the idea of nanophase separation within those polymers.
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Characterization of heterogeneous diffusion in confined soft matterTäuber, Daniela 20 October 2011 (has links)
A new method, probability distribution of diffusivities (time scaled square displacements between succeeding video frames), was developed to analyze single molecule tracking (SMT) experiments. This method was then applied to SMT experiments on ultrathin liquid tetrakis(2-ethylhexoxy)silane (TEHOS) films on Si wafer with 100 nm thermally grown oxide, and on thin semectic liquid crystal films. Spatial maps of diffusivities from SMT experiments on 220 nm thick semectic liquid crystal films reveal structure related dynamics. The SMT experiments on ultrathin TEHOS films were complemented by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS). The observed strongly heterogeneous single molecule dynamics within those films can be explained by a three-layer model consisting of (i) dye molecules adsorbed to the substrate, (ii) slowly diffusing molecules in the laterally heterogeneous near-surface region of 1 - 2 molecular diameters, and (iii) freely diffusing dye molecules in the upper region of the film. FCS and SMT experiments reveal a strong influence of substrate heterogeneity on SM dynamics. Thereby chemisorption to substrate surface silanols plays an important role. Vertical mean first passage times (mfpt) in those films are below 1 µs. This appears as fast component in FCS autocorrelation curves, which further contain a contribution from lateral diffusion and from adsorption events. Therefore, the FCS curves are approximated by a tri-component function, which contains an exponential term related to the mfpt, the correlation function for translational diffusion and a stretched exponential term for the broad distribution of adsorption events. Lateral diffusion coefficients obtained by FCS on 10 nm thick TEHOS films, thereby, are effective diffusion coefficients from dye transients in the focal area. They strongly depend on the substrate heterogeneity. Variation of the frame times for the acquisition of SMT experiments in steps of 20 ms from 20 ms to 200 ms revealed a strong dependence of the corresponding probability distributions of diffusivities on time, in particular in the range between 20 ms and 100 ms. This points to average dwell times of the dye molecules in at least one type of the heterogeneous regions (e.g. on and above silanol clusters) in the range of few tens of milliseconds.
Furthermore, time series of SM spectra from Nile Red in 25 nm thick poly-n-alkyl-methacrylate (PnAMA) films were studied. In analogy to translational diffusion, spectral diffusion (shifts in energetic positions of SM spectra) can be studied by probability distributions of spectral diffusivities, i.e. time scaled square energetic displacements. Simulations were run and analyzed to study contributions from noise and fitting uncertainty to spectral diffusion. Furthermore the effect of spectral jumps during acquisition of a SM spectrum was investigated. Probability distributions of spectral diffusivites of Nile Red probing vitreous PnAMA films reveal a two-level system. In contrast, such probability distributions obtained from Nile Red within a 25 nm thick poly-n-butylmethacrylate film around glass transition and in the melt state, display larger spectral jumps. Moreover, for longer alkyl side chains a solvent shift to higher energies is observed, which supports the idea of nanophase separation within those polymers.
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