4.7 Article

Convective carbon dioxide dissolution in a closed porous medium at high-pressure real-gas conditions

Journal

ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES
Volume 154, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.advwatres.2021.103950

Keywords

Convective dissolution; Geological CO2 storage; Porous media convection; Solubility trapping

Funding

  1. US National Science Foun-dation [DMS1813003]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences [DESC0001114]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy National Energy Technology Laboratory [DEFC2605NT42590]
  4. Center of Geological Storage of CO2 (GSCO2)
  5. Center for Mecha-nistic Control of Unconventional Formations (CMCUF) , an Energy Fron-tier Research Center - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science under DOE (BES) [DESC0019165]

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The research combined modeling and measurements to investigate the dynamics of convective carbon dioxide dissolution in different pressure and conditions, revealing that their models could quantitatively predict this process.
We combine modeling and measurements to investigate the dynamics of convective carbon dioxide (CO2) dissolution in a pressure-volume-temperature cell, extending a recent study by Wen et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 854, 2018, pp. 56-87) at low-pressure under ideal-gas conditions to high-pressure and real-gas conditions. Pressure dependent compressibility and solubility are included to model the evolution of CO2 concentration in the gas phase and at the interface, respectively. Simple ordinary-differential-equation models are developed to capture the mean behavior of the convecting system at large Rayleigh number and are then verified by using both numerical simulations and laboratory experiments. The prefactor for the linear scaling of convective CO2 dissolution is evaluated - for the first time - by using pressure-decay experiments in bead packs at reservoir conditions. The results show that our models could quantitatively predict the process of the convective CO2 dissolution in pressure-decay experiments. Moreover, the results also reveal that for increasing gas pressure in closed systems, the negative feedback of the pressure drop - resulting from the dissolution of CO2 in the liquid - is weakened due to the decrease of the solubility constant at real-gas conditions. Our analysis provides a new direction for determination and validation of the convective dissolution flux of CO2 in porous media systems.

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