Title
Caprock and overburden processes in geological CO2 storage: An experimental study on sealing efficiency and mineral alterations
Author
Wollenweber, J.
Alles, S.a.
Kronimus, A.
Busch, A.
Stanjek, H.
Krooss, B.M.
TNO Bouw en Ondergrond
Publication year
2009
Abstract
A comprehensive set of experimental and analytical methods has been used to characterise the sealing and fluid -transport properties of fine-grained (pelitic) sedimentary rocks under the pressure and temperature conditions of geological CO2 storage. The flow experiments were carried out on cylindrical sample plugs of 28.5 or 38 mm diameter and 10-20 mm length. The capillary sealing effici ncy of the lithotypes was determined by repetitive gas breakthrough experiments to test for reproducibility and to detect petrophysical changes of the rock samples resulting from CO2/water/rock interactions. These tests were performed with both, Helium and sc CO2 on the initially water-saturated sample plugs. Although molecular diffusion is not considered as an efficient leakage mechanism it represents a rate-determining step in mineral reactions and reactive transport. Therefore repetitive CO2 diffusion experiments were carried out on selected samples in the water-saturated state. These measurements provide information on the molecular mobility of CO2 and its hydrolysis products and on the physical and chemical storage capacity of the rock for these species. Before and after each experiment a steady -state fluid flow of water was established across the samples by applying high pressure gradients. This procedure ensured a defined state of saturation. Permeability coefficients derived from these tests were used to detect changes in the transport properties resulting from exposure to CO2. The fluid transport experiments were complemented by petrophysical (BET specific surface area, mercury porosimetry) and mineralogical analyses (X-ray diffraction; XRD ) of the original and post -experiment samples. The experiments revealed significant changes in the transport properties and the sealing efficiency of the samples. The gas breakthrough tests resulted in reduced capillary entry pressures and increased effective gas permeability as a result of repetitive exposure to CO2. Repeated diffusion tests revealed a faster diffusive transport in the second experiment. An increase in water permeability was consistently observed after both, capillary breakthrough tests and diffusi on experiments with CO2. The BET and mercury porosimetry results were not significantly affected by the CO2 treatment. XRD measurements before and after CO2 treatment revealed significant variations in the mineral compositions of the samples upon exposure to CO2. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Subject
Geosciences
capillary processes
caproc kintegrity
CO2 diffusion
gas breakthrough
mineral reactions
sealing efficiency
capillary processes
caproc kintegrity
CO diffusion
mineral reactions
sealing efficiency
Capillarity
Diffusion
Experiments
Flow of fluids
Gas permeability
Gases
Helium
Mercury (metal)
Minerals
Mining
Rock products
Sedimentary rocks
Sedimentology
Silicate minerals
Testing
Water recycling
X ray diffraction
X ray diffraction analysis
Transport properties
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:4bbdd60a-7209-41b9-abd0-44b77d9cb613
TNO identifier
241378
ISSN
1876-6102
Source
Energy Procedia, 1 (1), 3469-3476
Document type
article