Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

Coupled Thermo-Hydro-Mechanical Modelling of Carbon Dioxide Sequestration in Saline Aquifers Considering Phase Change


Affiliations
1 School of Mines, Luliang University, Lvliang, Shanxi 033000, China
2 School of Minerals and Energy Resources Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of New South Wales, Sydney NSW 2052, Australia
 

Carbon dioxide (CO2) sequestration in saline aquifers is considered to be one of the most viable measures to control its emissions. During the process of CO2 injection, phase changes of gas, liquid and supercritical CO2 will lead to changes in the density, dynamic viscosity, specific heat capacity and CO2 heat conductivity and solubility in water, which will influence the injection pressure and spatial distribution of CO2. To study the characteristics of injection pressure and spatial distribution of CO2 in saline aquifers, equations of state such as Peng–Robinson equation were used to realize the continuous calculation of the physical property parameters of gas, liquid and supercritical CO2. Based on the continuous physical property parameters, a fully thermo-hydro-mechanical (THM) coupled model was developed and then solved and verified using COMSOL Multiphysics software. It has been shown in this study that: (i) the predicted CO2 injection pressure by the THM coupled model is higher than that obtained from the uncoupled model; (ii) at the top boundary of the reservoir, the spatial distribution of CO2 can be divided into a rapid increase region, a slow decrease region, a rapid decrease region and an initial saturation region along the direction of CO2 migration and (iii) larger the reservoir geothermal gradient, more obvious is the gravity override effect.

Keywords

Carbon Dioxide Sequestration, Phase Change, Saline Acquifers, Thermo-Hydro-Mechanical Modelling.
User
Notifications
Font Size

  • Nwachukwu, A., Min, B. and Sriniyasan, S., Model selection for CO2 sequestration using surface deformation and injection data. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control, 2017, 56, 67–92.
  • Kim, S. and Hosseini, S. A., Study on the ratio of pore-pressure/stress changes during fluid injection and its implications for CO2 geologic storage. J. Pet. Sci. Eng., 2017, 149, 138–150.
  • Jiang, P., Li, X. and Xu, R., Thermal modeling of CO2 in the injection well and reservoir at the Ordos CCS demonstration project, China. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control, 2014, 23, 135–146.
  • Brassard, P., Godbout, S. and Raghavan, V., The production of engineered biochars in a vertical auger pyrolysis reactor for carbon sequestration. Energies, 2017, 10, 288.
  • Yin, S., Dusseault, M. B. and Rothenburg, L., Coupled THMC modeling of CO2 injection by finite element methods. J. Pet. Sci. Eng., 2011, 80, 53–60.
  • Zhan, J. et al., Decomposition analysis of the mechanism behind the spatial and temporal patterns of changes in carbon bio-sequestration in China. Energies, 2012, 5, 386–398.
  • Li, C. and Laloui, L., Coupled multiphase thermo-hydromechanical analysis of supercritical CO2 injection: benchmark for the in Salah surface uplift problem. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control, 2016, 51, 394–408.
  • Hou, Z., Gou, Y. and Taron, J., Thermo-hydro-mechanical modeling of carbon dioxide injection for enhanced gas-recovery (CO2–EGR): a benchmarking study for code comparison. Environ. Earth Sci., 2012, 67, 549–561.
  • Li, J., Chen, A. and Yan, Y., Numerical simulation of carbon dioxide migration in a sandstone aquifer considering the fluid–solid coupling. Acta Geotech., 2014, 9, 101–108.
  • Li, Q., Wu, Z. and Bai, Y., Thermo-hydro-mechanical modeling of CO2 sequestration system around fault environment. Pure Appl. Geophys., 2006, 163, 2585–2593.
  • Li, S., Li, X. and Zhang, D., A fully coupled thermo-hydromechanical, three-dimensional model for hydraulic stimulation treatments. J. Nat. Gas Sci. Eng., 2016, 34, 64–84.
  • Fang, Y., Ba, N. N. and Carroll, K., Development of a coupled thermo-hydro-mechanical model in discontinuous media for carbon sequestration. Int. J. Rock Mech. Min. Sci., 2013, 62, 138– 147.
  • Basirat, F., Fagerlund, F. and Denchik, N., Numerical modelling of CO2 injection at small-scale field experimental site in Maguelone, France. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control, 2016, 54, 200–210.
  • Khan, S., Al-Shuhail, A. A. and Khulief, Y. A., Numerical modeling of the geomechanical behavior of Ghawar Arab-D carbonate petroleum reservoir undergoing CO2 injection. Environ. Earth Sci., 2016, 75, 1499.
  • Liu, H., Hou, Z. and Were, P., Numerical investigation of the formation, displacement and caprock integrity in the Ordos Basin (China) during CO2 injection operation. J. Pet. Sci. Eng., 2016, 147, 168–180.
  • Du, Z., Lin, W. and Gu, J., Numerical investigation for heat transfer of supercritical CO2 cooled in a vertical circular tube. Heat Transfer Eng., 2012, 33, 905–911.
  • Joshi, A., Gangadharan, S. and Leonenko, Y., Modeling of pressure evolution during multiple well injection of CO2 in saline aquifers. J. Nat. Gas Sci. Eng., 2016, 36, 1070–1079.
  • Sasaki, K., Fujii, T. and Niibori, Y., Numerical simulation of supercritical CO2 injection into subsurface rock masses. Energy Convers. Manage., 2008, 49, 54–61.
  • Aavatsmark, I., Kometa, B. K. and Gasda, S. E., A generalized cubic equation of state with application to pure CO2 injection in aquifers. Comput. Geosci., 2016, 20, 623–635.
  • Youssef, Z., Barreau, A. and Mougin, P., Measurements of hydrate dissociation temperature of gas mixtures in the absence of any aqueous phase and prediction with the cubic–plus–association equation of state. J. Chem. Eng. Data, 2010, 55, 2809–2814.
  • Peng, D. Y. and Robinson, D. B., A new two-constant equation of state. Ind. Eng. Chem. Fundam., 1976, 15, 92–94.
  • Wu, X., Wang, Q. and He, Y., Temperature–pressure field coupling calculation model considering phase behavior change in CO2 injection well borehole. J. China Univ. Pet. (Edn. Nat. Sci.), 2009, 1, 73–77.
  • Jossi, J. A., Stiel, L. I. and Thodos, G., The viscosity of pure substances in the dense gaseous and liquid phases. Aiche J., 1962, 1, 59–63.
  • Poling, B. E., Prausnitz, J. M. and O’Connell, J. P., The Properties of Gases and Liquids, McGraw-Hill, New York, USA, 2001, 5th edn, pp. 6.1–6.33.
  • Guo, X., Rong, S. and Yang, J., The viscosity model based on PR equation of state. Acta Pet. Sin., 1999, 3, 64–69.
  • Shi, J., The distribution of temperature and pressure and injection string check of the injection and production wellbore of CO2 flooding. China University of Petroleum-Beijing, Beijing, China, 2009, pp. 12–30.
  • Schnepper C. A. and Stadtherr, M. A., Robust process simulation using interval methods. Comput. Chem. Eng., 1996, 20, 187–199.
  • Wang, L. and Liu, Y., Simulation on characteristics of supercritical fluid flow in porous media imposed temperature profiles. Chem. React. Eng. Technol., 1996, 20, 187–199.
  • Zirrahi, M., Hassanzadeh, H. and Abedi, J., Prediction of CO2 solubility in bitumen using the cubic-plus-association equation of state (CPA-EoS). J. Supercrit. Fluids, 2015, 98, 44–49.
  • Chung, F. T., Jones, R. A. and Nguyen, H. T., Measurements and correlations of the physical properties of CO2/heavy-crude-oil mixtures. Spe. Reserv. Eng., 1988, 3, 822–828.
  • Kong, X., High Seepage Mechanical, Press of University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, 2010, pp. 11–79.
  • Li, P., Kong, X. and Lu, D., Mathematical modeling of flow in saturated porous media on account of fluid-structure coupling effect. J. Hydrodyn., 2003, 4, 419–426.
  • Chen, J., Hopmans, J. W. and Grismer, M. E., Parameter estimation of two-fluid capillary pressure–saturation and permeability functions. Adv. Water Resour., 1999, 22, 479–493.
  • Vilarrasa, V., Silva, O. and Carrera, J., Liquid CO2 injection for geological storage in deep saline aquifers. Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control, 2013, 14, 84–96.
  • Vilarrasa, V., Koyama, T. and Neretnieks, I., Shear-induced flow channels in a single rock fracture and their effect on solute transport. Transp. Porous Media, 2011, 87, 503–523.
  • Lu, C., Lee, S. Y., and Han, W. S., Comments on ‘abrupt-interface solution for carbon dioxide injection into porous media’ by M. Dentz and D. Tartakovsky. Transp. Porous Media, 2009, 79, 29–37.

Abstract Views: 211

PDF Views: 72




  • Coupled Thermo-Hydro-Mechanical Modelling of Carbon Dioxide Sequestration in Saline Aquifers Considering Phase Change

Abstract Views: 211  |  PDF Views: 72

Authors

Weiyong Lu
School of Mines, Luliang University, Lvliang, Shanxi 033000, China
Xin Zhang
School of Minerals and Energy Resources Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of New South Wales, Sydney NSW 2052, Australia

Abstract


Carbon dioxide (CO2) sequestration in saline aquifers is considered to be one of the most viable measures to control its emissions. During the process of CO2 injection, phase changes of gas, liquid and supercritical CO2 will lead to changes in the density, dynamic viscosity, specific heat capacity and CO2 heat conductivity and solubility in water, which will influence the injection pressure and spatial distribution of CO2. To study the characteristics of injection pressure and spatial distribution of CO2 in saline aquifers, equations of state such as Peng–Robinson equation were used to realize the continuous calculation of the physical property parameters of gas, liquid and supercritical CO2. Based on the continuous physical property parameters, a fully thermo-hydro-mechanical (THM) coupled model was developed and then solved and verified using COMSOL Multiphysics software. It has been shown in this study that: (i) the predicted CO2 injection pressure by the THM coupled model is higher than that obtained from the uncoupled model; (ii) at the top boundary of the reservoir, the spatial distribution of CO2 can be divided into a rapid increase region, a slow decrease region, a rapid decrease region and an initial saturation region along the direction of CO2 migration and (iii) larger the reservoir geothermal gradient, more obvious is the gravity override effect.

Keywords


Carbon Dioxide Sequestration, Phase Change, Saline Acquifers, Thermo-Hydro-Mechanical Modelling.

References





DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv119%2Fi6%2F973-983