HYDROGEOCHEMICAL STUDY OF SPRINGS AROUND THE PATUHA GEOTHERMAL FIELD
Indonesia is a country traversed by the world's volcanic arc and surrounded by active tectonic setting. Indonesia has a large potential for geothermal resources, West Java is no exception. The presence of geothermal reservoirs below the surface is reflected on the surface through the emergen...
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Format: | Final Project |
Language: | Indonesia |
Online Access: | https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/56508 |
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Institution: | Institut Teknologi Bandung |
Language: | Indonesia |
Summary: | Indonesia is a country traversed by the world's volcanic arc and surrounded by active tectonic
setting. Indonesia has a large potential for geothermal resources, West Java is no exception. The
presence of geothermal reservoirs below the surface is reflected on the surface through the
emergence of geothermal manifestations, such as hot springs. The existence of geothermal
manifestations on the surface occurs due to the propagation of heat from below the surface through
the permeable zone. In geothermal exploration, temperature, water/steam ratio, chemical
evolution, and geothermal fluid flow systems are important factors of the reservoir for evaluating
its potential of geothermal resources. The study of the hydrogeochemical pattern of geothermal
fluids can be used to understand the type of water that arises from geothermal manifestations to
predict the geothermal system which will later help further research on the existing geothermal
potential. By researching fluids from springs or manifestations that appear, it is hoped that it can
clarify the origin, water-rock interactions, and the chemical evolution of geothermal fluids along
with the flow from the reservoir to the surface through the manifestations around the Patuha
Geothermal Field. Several analyzes can be carried out in hydrogeochemical studies, such as
analysis of the physicochemical properties of water, analysis of principal ions using Piper
Diagrams and Ternary Diagrams, and analysis of the isotope ratios of water ? 18O and ? 2H. The
research suspects that there are four types of water around the Patuha Geothermal Field, namely
sulfate water, sulfate-chloride water, sulfate-bicarbonate water, and bicarbonate water. Based on
the results of ? 18O and ?2H isotopes, water sources from water samples at the Patuha Geothermal
Field show that most of the samples are potentially mixing with meteoric water and other minor
sources, such as H2S exchange, and reactions with minerals. |
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