Geothermal energy recovery

3991817
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Inventors

Clay, Rufus G.

Application #

485319

Filed

Jul-2-1974

Published

Nov-16-1976

Current US Class

060/641.2
165/45
175/108
175/15
175/16

International Classes

F24J 003/02; E21C 021/00

Field of Search

175/108 175/16 175/11 175/15 175/54 166/177 166/61 166/62 60/641 165/45 165/1

Examiners

Davis, Jr.; Albert W.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Cushman, Darby & Cushman

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
Apparatus and method for recovering resources from subterranean rock formations, particularly heat energy, and more particularly geothermal energy. A heat-drill, which has means associated therewith for removing some rock from the earth and forming other rock into shafts, drills into the earth and forms two shafts at the same time. Both shafts communicate with each other and with the surface and are used to circulate a drilling mud which passes through the drill body and carries off the rock being removed. The heating means is shaped in a coil or grid pattern and operates at a temperature well above the melting point of the rock, heating the rock it displaces to well above its melting point, while raising the average temperature of the total rock melted to slightly above its melting point. The drilling mud absorbs heat as it circulates and the absorbed heat is put to any desirable use, particularly by being recovered from the drilling mud by a heat-exchanger on the surface. The drill has means associated therewith for automatically controlling its rate of advance into the earth and its general downward direction. The drill has means associated therewith for preparing the shafts, particularly the downflow shaft, for a particular type of fracturing of the surrounding rock formations to facilitate the collection of heat therefrom. Later heat recovery is facilitated by forming convection cells within the factures which encourage circulation of fluids at a distance from the shafts.
 
Claims
What I claim is:

1. A method of recovering resources from subterranean rock, particularly geothermal heat energy, comprising the steps of

a. drilling into the earth with a rockmelting drill,

b. forming two separate and distinct shafts at the same time with the drill,

c. circulating heat-absorbing fluid down one of said shafts to and through said drill and up another of said shafts, and

d. recovering heat absorbed by said fluid from said fluid.

2. A method as recited in claim 1 comprising the further step of removing a portion of the melted rock during the drilling process by extruding it into said circulating fluid.

3. A method as recited in claim 2 comprising the further step of removing a particularly located, substantially constant fraction of the rock penetrated by the drill.



Description
BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to a method and apparatus for recovering resources from below the earth's surface, particularly heat, and particularly geothermal energy resources. It is generally recognized by geologists that within a distance of 20 miles beneath any point of the earth's surface, including the ocean floors, temperatures reach levels that would usefully power heat engines. The only previous barrier to the recovery of such energy resources was the difficulty of providing adequate heat-exchanging means at depths with substantial geothermal resources. Once that barrier is overcome at a certain point of the earth's surface that point becomes a suitable site for geothermal energy recovery operations. Geologists believe that the easily available geothermal resources which have been successfully recovered in the past existed close to the earth's surface as the result of natural heat-exchanging mechanisms at greater depths. These natural heat-exchanging formations make available only a minute fraction of the potential resources lying within 20 miles of the surface. The earth's total geothermal resources greatly exceed the world's energy needs, not only for today but for the foreseeable future. These resources have been almost totally inaccessible to past methods and apparatus, not because the drilling apparatus had not reached a high state of development, but because of the inherent limitations, both technological and economic, of the past drilling methods. The present invention overcomes all of the limitations inherent in the prior methods. It is the purpose of the present invention to make the geothermal resources of the earth generally accessible to meet the world's great need for energy, particularly for non-polluting energy, which is an essential requirement of life and prosperity.
 
  As a supplement to this inventor's prior U.S. Pat. No. 5,727,621, this invention provides, in the combination with that patent, the additional concept...  Geothermal energy may be recovered through an underground well drilled to a depth approaching the earth's magma by circulation of injected heat transfer...