4.7 Article

Evolution of coal permeability from stress-controlled to displacement-controlled swelling conditions

Journal

FUEL
Volume 90, Issue 10, Pages 2987-2997

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2011.04.032

Keywords

Coal permeability model; Coal-gas interactions; Stress control; Displacement control; Coal swelling

Funding

  1. Western Australia CSIRO
  2. NIOSH [200-2008-25702]
  3. State Key Laboratory for Geomechanics and Underground Geomechanics, China University of Mining and Technology

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When a coal sample is constrained either by displacements or by a confining stress, additional force and resulting stress develop within the coal. A simple free expansion + push back approach is developed in this work to determine the magnitude of this stress and its effect on permeability evolution. In this approach, the coal is allowed to expand freely due to gas sorption, and then it is pushed back by the applied effective stress to the original constrained conditions. The total push-back strains are used to calculate the change in coal permeability. This free expansion plus push back approach is applied to examine the variety of permeability responses observed in the laboratory and the veracity of their representation by theoretical models linking this behavior to gas sorption-induced swelling/shrinkage. These cases include (1) coal swelling tests under the uniaxial strain condition; (2) coal swelling tests under the displacement controlled condition; (3) coal swelling tests under the stress controlled condition. These responses are verified against other coal permeability models available in the literature and against experimental data and field data where few analytical solutions are currently available. In particular, this approach has led to a new coal permeability model that can be used to explain stress-controlled experimental observations. Stress-controlled swelling tests are normally conducted in the laboratory to characterize the evolution of coal permeability under the influence of gas sorption. Typically reductions in permeability are observed from gas-sorption-induced swelling even where effective stresses remain constant. This behavior remains enigmatic as the permeability of the porous coal is determined by the effective stress only. Our model is capable of replicating this apparently anomalous behavior. (c) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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