Thermal response tests (TRTs) are used to measure the effective thermal conductivity in boreholes. The results serve as a basis for the dimensioning of commercial ground-source heat pump installations with closed loop systems. The study evaluated the reliability of TRTs performed in winter by comparing two TRTs carried out under very different winter weather conditions. A third TRT elucidated the influence of convection in wells with a higher heat input. Rock cores were analysed for quartz content and these results and the laboratory-measured thermal conductivity data were compared with the TRT results. This highlighted the importance of the distribution and orientation of minerals in the rock, and that a high quartz content does not necessarily give high thermal conductivity values. It is concluded that winter TRTs give useful results if additional temperature loggers are installed in anticipated fracture zones to detect groundwater flow and to survey the effect of infiltrating water.
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