Record Details

Title H2S Concentration in Geothermal and Hydrothermal Fluids - a New Gas Geothermometer
Authors Nigel J.F. Blamey
Year 2006
Conference Stanford Geothermal Workshop
Keywords H2S, gas, geothermometer, geothermal, hydrothermal, fluid inclusions, gas analysis, pyrite, magnetite, pyrrhotite
Abstract Several gas geothermometers exist that have applications in the geothermal industry. Most are based on the CO2-CH4-H2-H2O system but none involve H2S, a gas that is always present in geothermal systems. The equilibrium reactions for water-magnetite-pyrite-pyrrhotite-H2S-CO2-CH4 were first described by Norman et al. (1998) to explain approaching equilibrium from the hot and cold sides. Equilibrium is based on the reaction: 2Fe3O4 + 12H2S + CO2 = 6FeS2 + 10H2O + CH4 Fluid-rock equilibria modeling using PHREEQC v.2.10 confirms that the H2S content increases approximately five fold for every 50?C increase in temperature. The H2S concentration increases from 0.0003 mole % at 200?C to 0.008 mole % at 300?C. A formula to calculate temperature based on H2S concentration is presented for the 200-300?C range and is valid for non-boiling low-salinity fluids.
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