Back to Search Start Over

Numerical investigation of the formation displacement and caprock integrity in the Ordos Basin (China) during CO2 injection operation.

Authors :
Liu, Hejuan
Hou, Zhengmeng
Were, Patrick
Gou, Yang
Sun, Xiaoling
Source :
Journal of Petroleum Science & Engineering. Nov2016, Vol. 147, p168-180. 13p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Theoretical and numerical studies of coupled hydro-mechanical processes during geothermal and hydrocarbon production, nuclear waste disposal, and CO 2 sequestration in geological media have become a research focus worldwide. However, their application in China, especially CO 2 sequestration, is still in infancy and may need several years to develop. In this paper coupled hydro-mechanical processes in CO 2 migration, formation uplift and the state of caprock integrity as a result of CO 2 sequestration have been investigated by simulation at field scale for an integrated CCS (CO 2 Capture and Sequestration) project launched in the Ordos Basin, China. The paper aims at attaining long-term safety and integrity of caprock to ensure success for subsequent project operations at field scale. The linked TOUGH2MP-FLAC3D simulator has been used to study the coupled hydraulic-mechanical responses to primary stresses, injection rate and reservoir permeability during CO 2 injection and post-injection periods by means of 4 case studies. In the short-term operation of a CO 2 sequestration project launched in the Ordos Basin 0.1 Mt CO 2 has been injected in four saline aquifers within a period of 1 year and 9 years of relaxation time allotted for simulation runs. Contrary to using hydraulic field conditions alone, a combination of hydraulic-mechanical effects accounts for lateral migration of CO 2 in aquifer layers that leads to partial volumetric expansion of the reservoir. Amongst the main factors affecting hydro-mechanical processes, injection rate has the most significant impact. This is followed by reservoir permeability that is responsible for gauging the uplift trend rate in the post-injection period through hindering the dissipation of pore pressure. Results indicate that the scope of pore pressure attained will be larger in the isotropic stress state than in the compressional stress condition, pointing to the significance of primary stress. Calculation of the maximum storage pressure within safety limits using the integrity and shear criteria reveals that failure of caprock integrity increases with the amount of CO 2 injected. During injection however, the risk of caprock failure, especially in thin sandstone-caprock interlayered systems, increases with time. This paper estimates the pressure buildup in the four injection aquifers in the Ordos Basin, as a basis to ensure safety in the long-term operation of the CO 2 sequestration project, hence providing important reference for future commercial operations at field scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09204105
Volume :
147
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Petroleum Science & Engineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119000923
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.petrol.2016.04.041