4.6 Article

Experimental investigation into the sealing capability of naturally fractured shale caprocks to supercritical carbon dioxide flow

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 70, Issue 7, Pages 3393-3409

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12665-013-2407-y

Keywords

CO2 geological storage; Caprock leakage; Supercritical CO2 experiments; Fracture aperture; Capillary entry pressure

Funding

  1. European Community [227286 MUSTANG]
  2. Scottish Funding Council for the Joint Research Institute
  3. Heriot-Watt University which is part of the Edinburgh Research Partnership in Engineering and Mathematics (ERPem)
  4. Marathon Oil UK Ltd
  5. EPSRC [DT/F007744/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  6. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [DT/F007744/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Geological storage of CO2 is considered a solution for reducing the excess CO2 released into the atmosphere. Low permeability caprocks physically trap CO2 injected into underlying porous reservoirs. Injection leads to increasing pore pressure and reduced effective stress, increasing the likelihood of exceeding the capillary entry pressure of the caprocks and of caprock fracturing. Assessing on how the different phases of CO2 flow through caprock matrix and fractures is important for assessing CO2 storage security. Fractures are considered to represent preferential flow paths in the caprock for the escape of CO2. Here we present a new experimental rig which allows 38 mm diameter fractured caprock samples recovered from depths of up to 4 km to be exposed to supercritical CO2 (scCO(2)) under in situ conditions of pressure, temperature and geochemistry. In contrast to expectations, the results indicate that scCO(2) will not flow through tight natural caprock fractures, even with a differential pressure across the fractured sample in excess of 51 MPa. However, below the critical point where CO2 enters its gas phase, the CO2 flows readily through the caprock fractures. This indicates the possibility of a critical threshold of fracture aperture size which controls CO2 flow along the fracture.

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