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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2015-09-17
    Description: ABSTRACT Multiple scenarios of upward CO 2 migration driven by both injection-induced pressure and buoyancy force were investigated in a horizontally and vertically stratified core utilizing a core-flooding system with a 2D X-ray scanner. Two reservoir type scenarios were considered: (1) the terrestrial reservoir scenario (10 MPa and 50°C), where CO 2 exists in a supercritical state and (2) the deep-sea sediment reservoir scenario (28 MPa and 25°C), where CO 2 is stored in the liquid phase. The core-flooding experiments showed a 36% increase in migration rate in the vertical core setting compared with the horizontal setting, indicating the significance of the buoyancy force under the terrestrial reservoir scenario. Under both reservoir conditions, the injected CO 2 tended to find a preferential flow path (low capillary entry pressure and high-permeability (high- k ) path) and bypass the unfavorable pathways, leaving low CO 2 saturation in the low-permeability (low- k ) layers. No distinctive fingering was observed as the CO 2 moved upward, and the CO 2 movement was primarily controlled by media heterogeneity. The CO 2 saturation in the low- k layers exhibited a more sensitive response to injection rates, implying that the increase in CO 2 injection rates could be more effective in terms of storage capacity in the low- k layers in a stratified reservoir. Under the deep-sea sediment condition, the storage potential of liquid CO 2 was more than twice as high as that of supercritical CO 2 under the terrestrial reservoir scenario. In the end, multiphase transport simulations were conducted to assess the effects of heterogeneity on the spatial variation of pressure build-up, CO 2 saturation and CO 2 flux. Finally, we showed that a high gravity number () tended to be more influenced by the heterogeneity of the porous media. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
    Print ISSN: 0043-1397
    Electronic ISSN: 1944-7973
    Topics: Architecture, Civil Engineering, Surveying , Geography
    Published by Wiley on behalf of American Geophysical Union (AGU).
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