4.6 Article

Geomechanical and geochemical effects on sandstones caused by the reaction with supercritical CO2: an experimental approach to in situ conditions in deep geological reservoirs

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 69, Issue 6, Pages 1981-1998

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12665-012-2033-0

Keywords

CO2-storage; Experimental; Sandstone; Mineralogical alteration; Geomechanical; Triaxial

Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology
  2. ALSTOM
  3. EnBW
  4. E.ON
  5. Vattenfall
  6. VNG

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The geochemical and geomechanical behaviour of reservoir rocks from deep saline aquifers during the injection and geological storage of CO2 is studied in laboratory experiments. A combination of geochemical and geomechanical studies was carried out on various sandstones from the North German Basin. After the mineralogical, geochemical and petrophysical characterization, a set of sandstone samples was exposed to supercritical (sc)CO2 and brine for 2-4 weeks in an autoclave system. One sample was mineralogically and geochemically characterised and then loaded in a triaxial cell under in situ pressure and temperature conditions to study the changes of the geomechanical rock properties. After treatment in the autoclaves, geochemical alterations mainly in the carbonate, but also in the sheet silicate cements as well as in single minerals of the sandstones were observed, affecting the rocks granular structure. In addition to partial solution effects during the geochemical experiments, small grains of secondary carbonate and other mineral precipitations were observed within the pore space of the treated sandstones. Results of additional geomechanical experiments with untreated samples show that the rock strength is influenced by the saturation degree, the confining pressure, the pore fluid pressure and temperature. The exposure to pure scCO(2) in the autoclave system induces reduced strength parameters, modified elastic deformation behaviour and changes of the effective porosity in comparison to untreated sandstone samples. Experimental results show that the volume of pore fluid fluxing into the pore space of the sandstones clearly depends on the saturation level of the sample.

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