4.3 Article

Robust simulation of sharp-interface models for fast estimation of CO2 trapping capacity in large-scale aquifer systems

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL GEOSCIENCES
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages 93-113

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10596-015-9549-9

Keywords

CO2 storage; Vertical equilibrium; Compressibility; Dissolution

Funding

  1. Statoil ASA
  2. Research Council of Norway [199878, 215641, 243729]

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Modeling geological carbon storage represents a new and substantial challenge for the subsurface geosciences. To increase understanding and make good engineering decisions, containment processes and large-scale storage operations must be simulated in a thousand-year perspective. Large differences in spatial and temporal scales make it prohibitively expensive to compute the fate of injected CO2 using traditional 3D simulators. Instead, accurate forecast can be computed using simplified models that are adapted to the specific setting of the bouyancy-driven migration of the light fluid phase. This paper presents a family of vertically integrated models for studying the combined large-scale and long-term effects of structural, residual, and solubility trapping of CO2. The models are based on an assumption of a sharp interface separating CO2 and brine and can provide a detailed inventory of the injected CO2 volumes over periods of thousands of years within reasonable computational time. To be compatible with simulation tools used in industry, the models are formulated in a black-oil framework. The models are implemented in MRST-co2lab, which is an open community software developed especially to study and optimize large-scale, long-term geological storage of CO2. The resulting simulators are fully implicit and handle input from standard geomodeling tools.

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