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Role and impact of CO2-rock interactions during CO2 storage in sedimentary rocks

期刊

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijggc.2009.09.015

关键词

CO2-rock interactions; Coupled modelling; Natural analogues; Experiments; CO2 geological storage

资金

  1. StatoilHydro, Research Centre Trondheim, Norway

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Before implementing CO2 storage on a large scale its viability regarding injectivity, containment and long-term safety for both humans and environment is crucial. Assessing CO2-rock interactions is an important part of that as these potentially affect physical properties through highly coupled processes. Increased understanding of the physical impact of injected CO2 during recent years including buoyancy driven two-phase flow and convective mixing elucidated potential CO2 pathways and indicated where and when CO2-rock interactions are potentially occurring. Several areas of interactions can be defined: (1) interactions during the injection phase and in the near well environment, (2) long-term reservoir and cap rock interactions, (3) CO2-rock interactions along leakage pathways (well, cap rock and fault), (4) CO2-rock interactions causing potable aquifer contamination as a consequence of leakage, (5) water-rock interactions caused by aquifer contamination through the CO2 induced displacement of brines and finally engineered CO2-rock interactions (6). The driving processes of CO2-rock interactions are discussed as well as their potential impact in terms of changing physical parameters. This includes dissolution of CO2 in brines, acid induced reactions, reactions due to brine concentration, clay desiccation, pure CO2-rock interactions and reactions induced by other gases than CO2. Based on each interaction environment the main aspects that are possibly affecting the safety and/or feasibility of the CO2 storage scheme are reviewed and identified. Then the methodologies for assessing CO2-rock interactions are discussed. High priority research topics include the impact of other gaseous compounds in the CO2 stream on rock and cement materials, the reactivity of dry CO2, in the absence of water, how CO2 induced precipitation reactions affect the pore space evolution and thus the physical properties and the need for the development of coupled flow, geochemical and geomechanical models. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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