Our review
Validates code and provides physics reasoning for a 0-D CO2 lumped-parameter model used in geothermal reservoir simulations.
Strengths
- Ensures dimensional consistency and mass balance in physics-based code changes
- Provides step-by-step workflows for validating ODE solvers and emissions calculations
- Includes sanity checks and references to detailed documentation for edge cases
- Helps debug simulation behavior by linking state variables to core physics equations
Limitations
- Limited to a specific 0-D model; not applicable to other reservoir models or dimensions
- Requires familiarity with the model's equations and parameters to be effective
- Does not cover numerical stability or solver convergence issues beyond physics validation
Use when modifying, debugging, or planning changes to the CO2 lumped-parameter model code, especially ODE solvers or emissions logic.
Do not use for general geothermal modeling tasks not involving the specific co2lpm package, or for non-physics code reviews.
Security analysis
SafeThe skill only describes workflows for physics validation and debugging of a scientific model; it does not instruct or perform any destructive, exfiltrating, or obfuscated actions. The allowed tools (Read, Grep, Glob, Bash) are typical for codebases, and no dangerous commands are suggested.
No concerns found
Examples
I need to modify the ODE solver in the co2lpm package to use a different numerical integration method. Validate that the change preserves dimensional consistency and mass balance according to the model's physics.The simulation shows a sudden drop in reservoir CO2 concentration after a pressure reversal. Use the physics reasoning workflow to explain why this might happen and check against the model's sanity checks.I want to add a new emissions pathway for fugitive CO2 during plant operation. Walk me through the equations affected and how to integrate it while maintaining mass balance.name: co2lpm description: Validates code and provides physics reasoning for the 0-D CO2 lumped-parameter model for geothermal reservoirs. Use when modifying ODE solvers, parameter classes, emissions calculations, or concentration dynamics. Also use when debugging simulation behavior, explaining physics concepts, or planning changes to physics-related code. allowed-tools: Read, Grep, Glob, Bash
CO2 Lumped Parameter Model Physics Knowledge
This skill provides physics knowledge for the 0-D CO2 lumped-parameter model implemented in the co2lpm package.
When This Skill Applies
- Modifying code that implements concentration evolution equations
- Changing ODE solver logic or state variable handling
- Implementing or modifying emissions partitioning (field, plant, degassing)
- Debugging unexpected simulation behavior
- Planning changes to physics-related code
- Explaining why the model behaves a certain way
- Working with pressure reversal scenarios
Core Physics Reference
The model tracks reservoir CO2 concentration over time during geothermal extraction. Key state variables:
| Variable | Symbol | Meaning | Units | |----------|--------|---------|-------| | Pressure | P(t) | Reservoir pressure (relative to hydrostatic) | Pa | | Concentration | C(t) | CO2 mass fraction in reservoir fluid | kg/kg | | Upflow rate | q_up | Mass rate into reservoir from depth | kg/s | | Outflow rate | q_out | Mass rate leaving reservoir to surface | kg/s |
For detailed equations, see EQUATIONS.md. For symbol definitions and units, see SYMBOLS.md. For derivation logic, see DERIVATIONS.md. For edge cases and sanity checks, see SANITY_CHECKS.md.
Workflow A: Physics Validation
Use this workflow when reviewing or planning code changes.
Step 1: Identify affected equations
Determine which equations from EQUATIONS.md are affected by the change:
- Pressure evolution: E1 (exponential pressure decline)
- Concentration ODE: E2-E4 (with and without delay)
- Emissions: E5-E8 (degassing, field, plant, total)
- Solubility: E9-E10
Step 2: Check dimensional consistency
Using SYMBOLS.md, verify that:
- All terms in an equation have matching units
- ODE coefficients (alpha, beta, gamma, delta) have correct units
- Source terms have correct rate units (kg/s for mass)
Step 3: Verify mass balance
Changes must preserve:
- CO2 mass conservation in the reservoir
- Correct partitioning between dissolved, degassed, and emitted CO2
Step 4: Check sanity conditions
Verify the change doesn't violate sanity checks S1-S5 in SANITY_CHECKS.md.
Step 5: Report findings
Summarize:
- Which equations are affected
- Any dimensional inconsistencies found
- Any mass balance violations
- Any sanity check concerns
- Recommendations for correction
Workflow B: Physics Reasoning
Use this workflow when explaining behavior, debugging, or proposing solutions.
For explaining physics concepts:
- Identify the relevant equations and parameters
- State the physical interpretation
- Explain cause-and-effect relationships between variables
- Use the derivation steps from DERIVATIONS.md to show how equations connect
For debugging simulation issues:
- Identify which state variables are behaving unexpectedly
- Check if the issue relates to:
- Pressure reversal (q_eff > q_0c)
- Delay effects (tau > 0)
- Solubility limiting (degas=True)
- ODE coefficient calculation
- Trace through the analytical solution (gamma_exact or Cf_dde)
- Check edge cases against SANITY_CHECKS.md
For proposing physics-consistent changes:
- Identify which equations are affected
- Show how new terms integrate into the ODE system
- Demonstrate that mass balance remains satisfied
- Identify any new sanity checks needed
Quick Reference: Module Structure
| Module | Purpose | Key Functions/Classes |
|--------|---------|----------------------|
| model.py | Core LPM class | LumpedParameterModel, StateArrays |
| parameters.py | Dataclasses for inputs | ReservoirParams, OperationParams, ChemistryParams |
| solvers.py | ODE/DDE solvers | pressure_exp, integrate_ode, dde_solve |
| postproc.py | Emissions calculation | emissions() |
| utils.py | CO2 solubility | solubility_linear, solubility_slope_vs_T |
| scenarios.py | Preset configurations | high_gas(), low_gas(), delay_demo() |
Key Physical Constraints
These must always hold:
- Concentration non-negative: C(t) >= 0
- Solubility limit: C(t) <= C_s(P) when degas=True
- Pressure reversal: Occurs when q_eff > q_0c (extraction exceeds critical rate)
- Steady state exists: C_inf = alpha/beta (no delay) or alpha/(beta-gamma) (with delay)
- Delay stability: For tau > 0, the characteristic root lambda_1 must have negative real part
Scenario Classification
| Scenario | Key Parameters | Behavior | |----------|---------------|----------| | High-gas (Ohaaki-like) | degas=True, high C0 | Solubility-limited, significant degassing | | Low-gas (Wairakei-like) | degas=False, low C0 | No degassing, concentration dilutes | | Concentrating | fC < critical | CO2 accumulates in reservoir | | Diluting | fC > critical | CO2 decreases in reservoir | | Reversal | fq*q0 > q0c | Outflow reverses direction | | Delay | tau > 0 | Breakthrough lag, DDE dynamics |
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