Mimicking Rock Heterogeneity in the Laboratory to Better Understand its Effects on CO2 Migration and Trapping

7 Pages Posted: 4 Apr 2019 Last revised: 27 Oct 2020

See all articles by Prasanna Ganesan Krishnamurthy

Prasanna Ganesan Krishnamurthy

University of Texas at Austin - Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering Department

Luca Trevisan

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

Timothy Meckel

University of Texas at Austin - Gulf Coast Carbon Center

David DiCarlo

University of Texas at Austin - Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering Department

Abstract

Small scale heterogeneity characteristic of clastic formations has been well known to affect CO2 migration pathways during geologic carbon sequestration. Especially far field from the injection sites, when buoyancy and capillary forces take over from the injection pressure gradients, the effects of such geological features on the CO2 plume movement become compounded. Numerical simulations have established that accumulation and trapping of the buoyant plume is primarily due to the contrast in capillary entry pressures of different rock layers. Capillary trapping can help maximize the storage capacity of reservoirs and hence it is essential to understand the dynamics of CO2 movement and trapping under the influence of small-scale heterogeneity and quantify its effects. In this work we propose buoyancy driven migration experiments, conducted at the meter scale using glass beads packed in a quasi 2D glass cell. We demonstrate a novel automated glass bead filler system that can generate 2D heterogeneous structures in a reproducible manner. A fluid pair that mimics the phase densities and viscosities of CO2-Brine at reservoir pressures and temperatures is employed. Light transmission technique is used for visualization, and to calibrate and quantify saturation of the trapped non-wetting fluid during the experiments. With the ability to generate different types of heterogeneous structures in a reproducible manner, a systematic investigation of the effect of heterogeneity on capillary trapping becomes possible.

Keywords: Trapping mechanisms, GHGT-14

Suggested Citation

Ganesan Krishnamurthy, Prasanna and Trevisan, Luca and Meckel, Timothy and DiCarlo, David, Mimicking Rock Heterogeneity in the Laboratory to Better Understand its Effects on CO2 Migration and Trapping. 14th Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies Conference Melbourne 21-26 October 2018 (GHGT-14) , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3366307 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3366307

Prasanna Ganesan Krishnamurthy (Contact Author)

University of Texas at Austin - Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering Department ( email )

Austin, TX
United States

Luca Trevisan

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology ( email )

Kaiserstraße 12
Karlsruhe, Baden Württemberg 76131
Germany

Timothy Meckel

University of Texas at Austin - Gulf Coast Carbon Center

University Station, Box X
Austin, TX 78713
United States

David DiCarlo

University of Texas at Austin - Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering Department

Austin, TX
United States

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