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TOUGH Symposium 2009
TOUGH2

Short Courses

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TOUGH2 Course Information

TOUGH2 Training Course for Scientists and Engineers

A TOUGH2 beginner's training course will be held at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, September 9-11, 2009. Note that space is limited and registration is on a first-come, first-served basis. The registration page will be available by June 2009.

Agenda

This course will provide an introduction to TOUGH2, a simulation program for non-isothermal, multiphase flow of multicomponent fluids. The focus will be on enabling users to prepare input data for setting up and solving flow problems. Some of the sample problems presented in the TOUGH2 user's guide will be used, emphasizing their role as prototypes and templates for creating new applications. The course will also include a survey of the physical processes modeled, and of the mathematical and numerical approaches used. Participants are invited to present a suitable modeling problem of their own, which will then be discussed during the last section of the short course.

Purpose of the Course

The TOUGH family of codes is used for simulating multiphase fluid and heat flow and transport in porous and fractured media. The suite of TOUGH simulators has been applied to a wide range of studies involving the geological disposal of nuclear waste, geological CO2 sequestration, geothermal energy development, oil and gas production, environmental remediation and unsaturated zone hydrology. While ongoing development of TOUGH continues to expand modeling capabilities and incorporate increasingly complex processes, such as those associated with reactive chemistry (TOUGHREACT) and gas-hydrate dissociation (TOUGH+Hydrate), knowledge of the basic TOUGH modeling concepts serves as an important foundation. The goals of the TOUGH2 part of the training course are to (1) review fundamentals of multiphase fluid and heat flow, (2) present the design and input/output features of TOUGH2, and (3) provide hands-on training for application of TOUGH2 to a variety of flow problems.

Material to be Covered

Course Requirements

Material to be Distributed During the Course

Course attendees will be provided with the necessary course materials, including handouts of presentations and a User's Manual, and will be given access to computers on which the code is pre-installed (and compiled with the appropriate EOS modules).

Software Availability

Note that the cost of obtaining software licenses for participants' home institutes is not included in the cost of the training course. TOUGH2 is not sold by the Berkeley Lab, but can be licensed directly from the Energy Science and Technology Software Center, P.O. Box 1020, 175 Oak Ridge Turnpike, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-1020, Tel.:(865) 576-2606, E-mail: ESTSC@adonis.osti.gov.

See the following websites for more information:

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TOUGH+HYDRATE Course Information

TOUGH+HYDRATE Training Course for Scientists and Engineers

A TOUGH+HYDRATE training course will be held at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, September 17-19, 2009. Note that space is limited and registration is on a first-come, first-served basis. The registration page will be available by June 2009.

Agenda

The training course will cover in detail the capabilities of the T+H model in the description of hydrate behavior in geologic systems. The focus of the course is gas production from natural gas hydrate accumulations, but sufficient information and examples will be discussed to address other aspects of hydrate studies (e.g., hydrate formation and dissociation in response to changing environmental conditions, laboratory studies involving hydrates at very low temperatures, etc.).

Background

The TOUGH+HYDRATE (T+H) code can model the non-isothermal gas release, phase behavior and flow of fluids and heat in complex geologic media. It is written in FORTRAN 95/2003 and takes full advantage of object-oriented capabilities and the enhanced computational features of that language. The code can simulate production from natural CH4-hydrate deposits in the subsurface (i.e., in the permafrost and in deep ocean sediments), as well as laboratory experiments of hydrate dissociation/formation in porous/fractured media. T+H includes both an equilibrium and a kinetic model of hydrate formation and dissociation. The model accounts for heat and up to four mass components -- i.e., water, CH4, hydrate, and water-soluble inhibitors such as salts or alcohols. These are partitioned among four possible phases (gas phase, liquid phase, ice phase and hydrate phase). Hydrate dissociation or formation, phase changes, and the corresponding thermal effects are fully described, as are the effects of inhibitors. The model can describe all possible hydrate dissociation mechanisms, i.e., depressurization, thermal stimulation, salting-out effects, and inhibitor-induced effects.

 

Course Requirements

Material to be Distributed During the Course

Course attendees will be provided with the necessary course materials, including handouts of presentations and a User's Manual, and will be given access to computers on which the code is pre-installed (and compiled with the appropriate EOS modules).

Software Availability

TOUGH-related software packages can be ordered on-line from the Berkeley Lab Software Center.

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TOUGHREACT Course Information

TOUGHREACT Training Course for Scientists and Engineers

A TOUGHREACT beginner's training course will be held at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, September 17-18, 2009. Note that space is limited and registration is on a first-come, first-served basis. The registration page will be available by June 2009.

Agenda

This course will provide an introduction to TOUGHREACT, a simulation program for non-isothermal, chemically reactive flow of multiphase fluids. The focus will be on enabling users to prepare input data for setting up and solving flow problems. Some of the sample problems presented in the TOUGHREACT user's guide will be used, emphasizing their role as prototypes and templates for creating new applications. The course will also include a survey of the physical and chemical processes modeled, and of the mathematical and numerical approaches used. Participants are welcome during any time of the course to bring up their own topics.

Background of TOUGHREACT

TOUGHREACT is a numerical simulation program for chemically reactive non-isothermal flows of multiphase fluids in porous and fractured media. The program is written in Fortran 77 and was developed by introducing reactive chemistry into the multiphase flow code TOUGH2 V2. Interactions between mineral and fluids can occur under local equilibrium or kinetic rates. Multiple gas species can be transported and undergo equilibrium gas-water reactions. Porosity, permeability, and capillary pressure changes can be coupled to mineral precipitation and dissolution reactions.

The TOUGHREACT program is distributed to the public through the US Department of Energy's Energy Science and Technology Software Center (email: ESTSC@adonis.osti.gov). A comprehensive user's guide is available, including worked sample problems addressing geothermal reservoirs and hydrothermal systems, nuclear waste isolation, groundwater quality, sequestration of carbon dioxide in saline aquifers, and supergene copper enrichment. Additional information is available on the TOUGHREACT homepage.

Course Information

The course will cover the physical and chemical processes modeled by TOUGHREACT, will summarize the mathematical and numerical methods used, and will provide in-depth discussion and guidance for applying TOUGHREACT to a variety of reaction-transport problems. Preparation of input data and interpretation of simulation results will be discussed for problems in groundwater quality, nuclear waste isolation, production from and injection into geothermal reservoirs, and geologic sequestration of greenhouse gases. The goal of the course is to provide hands-on computing experience to enable participants to become active TOUGHREACT users.

Course Requirements

We will assume that participants have some familiarity and experience with multiphase flow in general and TOUGH2 in particular, as well as numerical modeling experience for batch geochemistry in geologic media. People interested in TOUGHREACT who do not have prior TOUGH2 experience are strongly urged to register for Part 1 as well.

Material to be Distributed During the Course

Course attendees will be provided with the necessary course materials, including handouts of presentations and a User's Manual, and will be given access to computers on which the code is pre-installed (and compiled with the appropriate EOS modules).

Software Availability

Note that the cost of obtaining software licenses for participants' home institutes is not included in the cost of the training course. TOUGHREACT is not sold by the Berkeley Lab, but can be licensed directly from the Energy Science and Technology Software Center, P.O. Box 1020, 175 Oak Ridge Turnpike, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-1020, Tel.:(865) 576-2606, ESTSC@adonis.osti.gov.

See the following websites for more information:

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PetraSim

On Sunday, September 13, preceding the TOUGH Symposium, Thunderhead Engineering will offer a course on PetraSim, a graphical user interface for TOUGH2 and TOUGHREACT. The course will be held in the Sibley Room of the Alumni House on the Berkeley campus.

More information »

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Transportation to Short Courses

All TOUGH Courses will be at LBNL in Building 90

Directions to LBNL from Downtown Berkeley using LBNL Shuttle Bus Service

  • The shuttle stop is on the north east corner of Shattuck Avenue at Addison
  • You’ll see the “Berkeley Lab” sign
  • The LBNL “BLUE” shuttle bus runs every 10 minutes
  •  Please wave at the LBNL bus driver to ensure that they know you would like to ride the shuttle bus.
  • Some of the bus stops are also stops for the UCB and other public transportation. Make sure you take the bus labeled “LBNL” or “Berkeley Lab”
  • Please tell the driver you are attending the TOUGH Courses in Building 90
  • This bus will take you to Building 90

Directions to LBNL, Building 90 from Hotel Durant using LBNL Shuttle Bus Service

  • Turn left on Durant St. after exiting hotel.
  • Turn right on Bowditch to Bancroft Avenue.
  • Cross the street and go right to College Avenue.
  • Go up Bancroft to the LBNL shuttle bus stop at College and Bancroft (or down the street at Telegraph and Bancroft).
  • You’ll see the “Berkeley Lab” sign.
  • The LBNL “Orange” shuttle bus runs every 10 minutes until 9:40am
  • Please wave at the LBNL bus driver to ensure that they know you would like to ride the shuttle bus.
  • Some of the bus stops are also stops for the UCB and other public transportation. Make sure you take the bus labeled “LBNL” or “Berkeley Lab”
  • Please tell the driver you are attending the TOUGH Courses in Building 90
  • The “Orange” shuttle will drive to downtown Berkeley, then up the Hill to LBNL along the north side of campus.
  • Get off at the Hearst and Leroy bus stop (in front of Cory Hall on UCB campus).
  • Please pull the chord in the bus above the window to alert the driver.
  • Wait at the same bus stop for the LBNL “Blue” bus.
  • Please wave to the driver.
  • This bus will take you to Building 90

Click here for the BLUE Route schedule and Map

Click here for Next Bus – GPS based arrival times

Click here for information on the LBNL Shuttle Services
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Contacts
  • Hydrogeology Department, Earth Sciences Division
  • George Moridis, Conference Chair, gjmoridis@lbl.gov, 510.486.4746
  • Carol Valladao, Senior Administrator, cavalladao@lbl.gov, 510.486.5781