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Organic acid concentration thresholds for ageing of carbonate minerals: Implications for CO2 trapping/storage.

Authors :
Ali, Muhammad
Al-Anssari, Sarmad
Arif, Muhammad
Barifcani, Ahmed
Sarmadivaleh, Mohammad
Stalker, Linda
Lebedev, Maxim
Iglauer, Stefan
Source :
Journal of Colloid & Interface Science. Jan2019, Vol. 534, p88-94. 7p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Graphical abstract Highlights • Carbonate aquifers (calcite surfaces). • Dissolution of organic acid components in crude oil (stearic acid). • CO 2 trapping in deep saline aquifers and depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs and their associated risks in the presence of organic acid components. Abstract Hypothesis CO 2 geological storage (CGS) involves different mechanisms which can store millions of tonnes of CO 2 per year in depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs and deep saline aquifers. But their storage capacity is influenced by the presence of different carboxylic compounds in the reservoir. These molecules strongly affect the water wetness of the rock, which has a dramatic impact on storage capacities and containment security. However, precise understanding of how these carboxylic acids influence the rock's CO 2 -wettability is lacking. Experiments We thus systematically analysed these relationships as a function of pressure, temperature, storage depth and organic acid concentrations. A particular focus was on identifying organic acid concentration thresholds above which storage efficiency may get influenced significantly. Findings These thresholds (defined for structural trapping as a water contact angle θ > 90°; and for capillary trapping when primary drainage is unaffected, i.e. θ > 50°) were very low for structural trapping (∼10−3–10−7 M organic acid concentration C organic) and extremely low for capillary trapping (10−7 M to below 10−10 M C organic). Since minute organic acid concentrations are always present in deep saline aquifers and certainly in depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs, significantly lower storage capacities and containment security than previously thought can be predicted in carbonate reservoirs, and reservoir-scale models and evaluation schemes need to account for these effects to de-risk CGS projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219797
Volume :
534
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Colloid & Interface Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132548399
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2018.08.106