Brine-saturated kaolinite mudrocks preserve capillary sealing to CO2 at high pressure and temperature

被引:0
|
作者
Awad, Mohamed M. [1 ]
Espinoza, D. Nicolas [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Austin, Hildebrand Dept Petr & Geosyst Engn, Austin, TX 78712 USA
关键词
CCS; Gas column; Trapping; Capillary pressure; Wettability; Seal; Snap-off; GAS BREAKTHROUGH EXPERIMENTS; CONTACT-ANGLE MEASUREMENTS; SUPERCRITICAL CO2; HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY; INTERFACIAL-TENSION; WETTABILITY EVALUATION; STORAGE CAPACITY; SILICA SURFACES; MULTIPHASE FLOW; SHALE CAPROCKS;
D O I
10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2025.107396
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Caprock sealing capacity is essential for carbon geological storage in saline aquifers and depleted oil and gas formations. Clay-rich caprocks and fault gouge are expected to hold buoyant CO2 in the storage formation by capillary forces. However, all direct capillary sealing capacity measurements of clay-rich rocks to CO2 were so far limited to pressures below similar to 20 MPa and/or temperatures below 50 degrees C, typically lower than target storage conditions. This paper presents new results of brine absolute permeability, capillary CO2 breakthrough pressure, and post-breakthrough CO2 permeability for resedimented kaolinite clay plugs at fluid pressures greater than 41 MPa, temperatures of 60 degrees C and 80 degrees C, and mean effective stress of similar to 6.8 MPa. The results show that breakthrough pressure (P-CO2 - P-w) is always positive and remains in the interval between similar to 1.4 MPa and 2.8 MPa within the range of pressure and temperature explored. Moreover, average post-breakthrough CO2 relative permeability is similar to 5 %. An additional test with a clay mixture representative of a shale from the North Sea, at similar pressure-temperature conditions held a differential pressure, i.e., no breakthrough, over three months with a maximum difference P-CO2 - P-w = 5.71 MPa. Results and analysis support the water-wet properties of clays at high pressure and temperature and the resulting capillary sealing capacity to CO2. These results support expectations that clay-rich caprocks are satisfactory seals for holding buoyant CO2 via capillary forces. Results also suggest that if the sealing capacity is surpassed, clay-rich caprocks can limit advective flow because of their low CO2 relative permeability and potential for resealing through snap-off.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Capillary pressure heterogeneity and hysteresis for the supercritical CO2/water system in a sandstone
    Pini, Ronny
    Benson, Sally M.
    ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2017, 108 : 277 - 292
  • [22] Impact of solid surface energy on wettability of CO2/brine/mineral systems as a function of pressure, temperature and salinity
    Arif, Muhammad
    Barifcani, Ahmed
    Lebedev, Maxim
    Iglauer, Stefan
    13TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL TECHNOLOGIES, GHGT-13, 2017, 114 : 4832 - 4842
  • [23] CO2 in water foam stabilized with CO2-dissolved surfactant at high pressure and high temperature
    Zhang, Xuan
    Zheng, Weijie
    Zhang, Tianci
    Ge, Jijiang
    Jiang, Ping
    Zhang, Guicai
    JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2019, 178 : 930 - 936
  • [24] Impact of pressure and temperature on CO2-brine-mica contact angles and CO2-brine interfacial tension: Implications for carbon geo-sequestration
    Arif, Muhammad
    Al-Yaseri, Ahmed Z.
    Barifcani, Ahmed
    Lebedev, Maxim
    Iglauer, Stefan
    JOURNAL OF COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE, 2016, 462 : 208 - 215
  • [25] Co-sequestration of SO2 with supercritical CO2 in carbonates: An experimental study of capillary trapping, relative permeability, and capillary pressure
    Akbarabadi, Morteza
    Piri, Mohammad
    ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2015, 77 : 44 - 56
  • [26] Impact of Capillary Pressure, Salinity and In situ Conditions on CO2 Injection into Saline Aquifers
    Alkan, H.
    Cinar, Y.
    Uelker, E. B.
    TRANSPORT IN POROUS MEDIA, 2010, 84 (03) : 799 - 819
  • [27] Capillary pressure and heterogeneity for the CO2/water system in sandstone rocks at reservoir conditions
    Pini, Ronny
    Krevor, Samuel C. M.
    Benson, Sally M.
    ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2012, 38 : 48 - 59
  • [28] Interfacial Tension of CO2 and Organic Liquid under High Pressure and Temperature
    Yang, Zihao
    Li, Mingyuan
    Peng, Bo
    Lin, Meiqin
    Dong, Zhaoxia
    Ling, Yong
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, 2014, 22 (11-12) : 1302 - 1306
  • [29] Experimental and numerical study on supercritical CO2/brine transport in a fractured rock: Implications of mass transfer, capillary pressure and storage capacity
    Oh, Junho
    Kim, Kue-Young
    Han, Weon Shik
    Kim, Taehee
    Kim, Jeong-Chan
    Park, Eungyu
    ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2013, 62 : 442 - 453
  • [30] Steady-state supercritical CO2 and brine relative permeability in Berea sandstone at different temperature and pressure conditions
    Chen, Xiongyu
    Gao, Shuang
    Kianinejad, Amir
    DiCarlo, David A.
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2017, 53 (07) : 6312 - 6321