학술논문

Quantification of solubility trapping in natural and engineered CO2 reservoirs
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Petroleum Geoscience. 27(4)
Subject
22|Environmental geology
Atlantic Ocean
Bravo Dome
carbon dioxide
carbon sequestration
Cenozoic
gas-water interface
injection
Jackson Dome
migration
Mississippi
natural analogs
Neogene
New Mexico
North Atlantic
North Sea
quantitative analysis
rates
reservoir properties
residence time
Sleipner Field
solubility
solution
Tertiary
underground installations
underground storage
United States
Utsira Formation
Language
English
ISSN
1354-0793
Abstract
Secure retention of CO2 in geological reservoirs is essential for effective storage. Solubility trapping, the dissolution of CO2 into formation water, is a major sink on geological timescales in natural CO2 reservoirs. Observations during CO2 injection, combined with models of CO2 reservoirs, indicate the immediate onset of solubility trapping. There is uncertainty regarding the evolution of dissolution rates between the observable engineered timescale of years and decades, to the >10 kyr state represented by natural CO2 reservoirs. A small number of studies have constrained dissolution rates within natural analogues. The studies show that solubility trapping is the principal storage mechanism after structural trapping, removing 10-50% of CO2 across whole reservoirs. Natural analogues, engineered reservoirs and model studies produce a wide range of estimates on the fraction of CO2 dissolved and the dissolution rate. Analogue and engineered reservoirs do not show the high fractions of dissolved CO2 seen in several models. Evidence from natural analogues supports a model of most dissolution occurring during emplacement and migration, before the establishment of a stable gas-water contact. A rapid decline in CO2 dissolution rate over time suggests that analogue reservoirs are in dissolution equilibrium for most of the CO2 residence time. Supplementary material: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5476199 Thematic collection: This article is part of the Geoscience for CO2 storage collection available at: https://www.lyellcollection.org/cc/geoscience-for-co2-storage