Geophysical Monitoring of Small Scale CO2-injection into a Deep Saline Aquifer - the Ketzin Pilot Site

Author(s):  
Stefan Lüth ◽  
Cornelia Schmidt-Hattenberger ◽  
Jan Henninges ◽  
Peter Bergmann ◽  
Alexandra Ivanova
Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 3397
Author(s):  
Danqing Liu ◽  
Yilian Li ◽  
Ramesh Agarwal

As a new “sink” of CO2 permanent storage, the depleted shale reservoir is very promising compared to the deep saline aquifer. To provide a greater understanding of the benefits of CO2 storage in a shale reservoir, a comparative study is conducted by establishing the full-mechanism model, including the hydrodynamic trapping, adsorption trapping, residual trapping, solubility trapping as well as the mineral trapping corresponding to the typical shale and deep saline aquifer parameters from the Ordos basin in China. The results show that CO2 storage in the depleted shale reservoir has merits in storage safety by trapping more CO2 in stable immobile phase due to adsorption and having gentler and ephemeral pressure perturbation responding to CO2 injection. The effect of various CO2 injection schemes, namely the high-speed continuous injection, low-speed continuous injection, huff-n-puff injection and water alternative injection, on the phase transformation of CO2 in a shale reservoir and CO2-injection-induced perturbations in formation pressure are also examined. With the aim of increasing the fraction of immobile CO2 while maintaining a safe pressure-perturbation, it is shown that an intermittent injection procedure with multiple slugs of hug-n-puff injection can be employed and within the allowable range of pressure increase, and the CO2 injection rate can be maximized to increase the CO2 storage capacity and security in shale reservoir.


Energy ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 133 ◽  
pp. 404-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.D. Rathnaweera ◽  
P.G. Ranjith ◽  
M.S.A. Perera ◽  
A.S. Ranathunga ◽  
W.A.M. Wanniarachchi ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 124 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daiji TANASE ◽  
Ziqiu XUE ◽  
Koji KANO

2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (Suppl. 3) ◽  
pp. 917-925
Author(s):  
Huimin Wang ◽  
J.G. Wang ◽  
Xiaolin Wang ◽  
Fakai Dou ◽  
Bowen Hu

This study investigated the thermal effects of thermal stress and Joule-Thomson cooling on CO2 migration in a deep saline aquifer through a hydro-thermal-mechanical model. Firstly, the temperature variation of injected CO2 was analyzed through the coupling of two-phase flow, deformation of porous medium and heat transfer with Joule-Thomson effect. Then, the effect of capillary entry pressure on CO2 plume was numerically investigated and compared. It is found that injection temperature and Joule-Thomson effect can significantly affect the distributions of CO2 mass and temperature, particularly in the upper zone near the injection well. The reduction of capillary entry pressure accelerates the upward migration of CO2 plume and increases the CO2 lateral migration distance.


Author(s):  
Stefan Lüth ◽  
Jan Henninges ◽  
Monika Ivandic ◽  
Christopher Juhlin ◽  
Thomas Kempka ◽  
...  

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