4.8 Article

Pore Scale Observations of Trapped CO2 in Mixed-Wet Carbonate Rock: Applications to Storage in Oil Fields

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue 18, Pages 10282-10290

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b03111

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Funding

  1. Qatar Carbonates and Carbon Storage Research Centre (QCCSRC)
  2. Qatar Petroleum
  3. Shell
  4. Qatar Science & Technology Park

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Geologic CO, storage has been identified as a key to avoiding dangerous climate change. Storage in oil reservoirs dominates the portfolio of existing projects due to favorable economics. However, in an earlier related work (Al-Menhali and Krevor Environ. Sci. Technol. 2016, 50, 2727-2734), it was identified that an important trapping mechanism, residual trapping, is weakened in rocks with a mixed wetting state typical of oil reservoirs. We investigated the physical basis of this weakened trapping using pore scale observations of supercritical CO2 in mixed-wet carbonates. The wetting alteration induced by oil provided CO2-wet surfaces that served as conduits to flow. In situ measurements of contact angles showed that CO2 varied from nonwetting to wetting throughout the pore space, with contact angles ranging 25 degrees < theta < 127 degrees; in contrast, an inert gas, N-2, was nonwetting with a smaller range of contact angle 24 degrees < theta < 68 degrees. Observations of trapped ganglia morphology showed that this wettability allowed CO2 to create large, connected, ganglia by inhabiting small pores in mixed-wet rocks. The connected ganglia persisted after three pore volumes of brine injection, facilitating the desaturation that leads to decreased trapping relative to water-wet systems.

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