Petrophysical examination of CO2-brine-rock interactions—results of the first stage of long-term experiments in the potential Zaosie Anticline reservoir (central Poland) for CO2 storage

被引:0
|
作者
Radosław Tarkowski
Magdalena Wdowin
Maciej Manecki
机构
[1] The Mineral and Energy Economy Research Institute of The Polish Academy of Sciences,
[2] AGH-University of Science and Technology,undefined
来源
关键词
CO; storage; Reservoir sandstones; Sealing rocks;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The objective of the study was determination of experiment-induced alterations and changes in the properties of reservoir rocks and sealing rocks sampled from potential reservoir for CO2. In the experiment, rocks submerged in brine in specially constructed reactors were subjected to CO2 pressure of 6 MPa for 20 months at room temperature. Samples of Lower Jurassic reservoir rocks and sealing rocks (sandstones, claystones, and mudstones) from the Zaosie Anticline (central Poland) were analysed for their petrophysical properties (specific surface area, porosity, pore size and distribution) before and after the experiment. Comparison of the ionic composition the brines before and after the experiment demonstrated an increase in total dissolved solids as well as the concentration of sulphates and calcium ions. This indicates partial dissolution of the rock matrix and the cements. As a result of the reaction, the properties of reservoir rocks did not changed significantly and should not affect the process of CO2 storage. In the case of the sealing rocks, however, the porosity, the framework density, as well as the average capillary and threshold diameter increased. Also, the pore distribution in the pore space changed in favour of larger pores. The reasons for these changes could not be explained by petrographic characteristics and should be thoroughly investigated.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [31] Evaluation of long-term mineral trapping at the Ketzin pilot site for CO2 storage: An integrative approach using geochemical modelling and reservoir simulation
    Klein, Elisa
    De Lucia, Marco
    Kempka, Thomas
    Kuehn, Michael
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL, 2013, 19 : 720 - 730
  • [32] Monitoring Dynamic Rock Fracture Behavior after Long-Term CO2 Injection in Tight Reservoir: Semi-Analytical Model and Case Study
    Wang, Zhipeng
    Ning, Zhengfu
    Guo, Wenting
    Zhang, Yuanxin
    ENERGY & FUELS, 2023, 37 (23) : 18928 - 18944
  • [33] The long-term corrosion behavior of abandoned wells under CO2 geological storage conditions: (1) Experimental results for cement alteration
    Satoh, Hisao
    Shimoda, Satoko
    Yamaguchi, Kohei
    Kato, Hiroyasu
    Yamashita, Yuji
    Miyashiro, Kazutoshi
    Saito, Shigeru
    GHGT-11, 2013, 37 : 5781 - 5792
  • [34] Predictions of long-term behavior of a large-volume pilot test for CO2 geological storage in a saline formation in the Central Valley, California
    Doughty, Christine
    Myer, Larry R.
    Oldenburg, Curtis M.
    GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL TECHNOLOGIES 9, 2009, 1 (01): : 3291 - 3298
  • [35] A residual oil zone (ROZ) assessment methodology with application to the central basin platform (Permian Basin, USA) for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) and long-term geologic CO2 storage
    Karacan, G. Ozgen
    Brennan, Sean T.
    Buursink, Marc L.
    Freeman, Philip A.
    Lohr, Celeste D.
    Merrill, Matthew D.
    Olea, Ricardo A.
    Warwick, Peter D.
    GEOENERGY SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2023, 230
  • [36] The Frankfurt Biosphere Model: A global process-oriented model of seasonal and long-term CO2 exchange between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere .2. Global results for potential vegetation in an assumed equilibrium state
    Kohlmaier, GH
    Badeck, FW
    Otto, RD
    Hager, C
    Donges, S
    Kindermann, J
    Wurth, G
    Lang, T
    Jakel, U
    Nadler, A
    Ramge, P
    Klaudius, A
    Habermehl, S
    Ludeke, MKB
    CLIMATE RESEARCH, 1997, 8 (01) : 61 - 87