This is a presentation on A Multi-Component Approach to Characterizing In-Situ Stress at the U.S DOE FORGE EGS Site: Laboratory, Modeling and Field Measurement project by University of Pittsburgh, presented by Dr. Andrew Bunger. The project's objective was to characterize stress in the Utah FORGE EGS reservoir using three methods: a laboratory rock-core stress estimation combined with a Machine Learning approach for estimation of in-situ stress from field sonic-log data, a field based in-situ measurement (min-frac) approach, and a modeling approach. This presentation was featured at the Utah FORGE R&D Annual Workshop on September 8, 2025. The workshop offered a valuable opportunity to review the progress of Research and Development projects funded under Solicitation 2020-1, which aim to improve our understanding of the key factors influencing Enhanced Geothermal System (EGS) reservoir and resource development.
Utah FORGE 2-2439v2: A Multi-Component Approach to Characterizing In-Situ Stress - 2025 Workshop Presentation
L o a d i n g
Organization
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) - view all
Update frequencyunknown
Last updated4 days ago
Overview2025 Annual WorkshopEGSUtah FORGEanalysischaracterizationenergygeothermalin-situ stresslaboratory testingmachine learningmini-frac testingpresentationpresentation recordingpresentation slidesreportsonic logstress modeling
Additional Information
KeyValue
Dcat Issued2025-09-18T06:00:00Z
Dcat Modified2025-09-21T18:55:40Z
Dcat Publisher NameUniversity of Pittsburgh
Guidhttps://data.openei.org/submissions/8524
Harvest Object Id9fa701ed-8508-4373-8b4b-ecb8726d3748
Harvest Source Id4eb7107f-a2b1-40e3-b36a-8161aa98a56e
Harvest Source TitleOpenEI Data Portal
