Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Earth Resources Laboratory
Abstract
The Los Alamos Hot Dry Rock Reservoir is an experimental geothermal project in
north-central New Mexico. A fractured zone was created within otherwise impermeable
igneous and metamorphic rock by injecting water into a borehole under high pressure,
at about 3.5 km depth. During the injection process, the seismic waves created by the
fracturing events were recorded by seismometers located in four nearby boreholes. A
subset of the arrival times from these microearthquakes is iteratively inverted for the
three-dimensional P-wave and S-wave velocity structures and the hypocenter parameters,
using the separation of parameters technique. The inversion results indicate that
the P-wave and S-wave velocities decrease by at least 20% within the fractured zone.
Also, the hypocenters are rotated into a more compact distribution, elative to the initiallocations found using a homogeneous velocity model, suggesting that the hypocenter
locations are significantly improved.United States. Dept. of Energy (Grant DE-FG02-86ER136360)Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Full Waveform Acoustic Logging ConsortiumPhillips Petroleum Fellowshi