The characteristics of the hydro-thermal flow which occurs when a cold fluid
is injected into a hot fractured bedrock depend on the morphology of the
fracture. We consider a sharp triangular asperity, invariant in one direction,
perturbing an otherwise flat fracture. We investigate its influence on the
macroscopic hydraulic transmissivity and heat transfer efficiency, at fixed low
Reynolds number. In this study, numerical simulations are done with a coupled
lattice Boltzmann method that solves both the complete Navier-Stokes and
advection-diffusion equations in three dimensions. The results are compared
with those obtained under lubrication approximations which rely on many
hypotheses and neglect the three-dimensional (3D) effects. The lubrication
results are obtained by analytically solving the Stokes equation and a
two-dimensional (integrated over the thickness) advection-diffusion equation.
We use a lattice Boltzmann method with a double distribution (for mass and
energy transport) on hypercubic and cubic lattices. Beyond some critical slope
for the boundaries, the velocity profile is observed to be far from a quadratic
profile in the vicinity of the sharp asperity: the fluid within the triangular
asperity is quasi-static. We find that taking account of both the 3D effects
and the cooling of the rock, are important for the thermal exchange. Neglecting
these effects with lubrication approximations results in overestimating the
heat exchange efficiency. The evolution of the temperature over time, towards
steady state, also shows complex behavior: some sites alternately reheat and
cool down several times, making it difficult to forecast the extracted heat.Comment: In Journal of Geophysical Research B (2013) online firs