Numerical studies of long-term wettability alteration effects in CO2 storage applications
Lecture
Accepted version
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2976276Utgivelsesdato
2021Metadata
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- Publikasjoner fra Cristin [1490]
Sammendrag
The wettability of the rock surface in porous media has an effect on the constitutive saturation functions that govern capillary pressure and relative permeability. The term wettability alteration refers to the change of this property over time by processes such as CO2 interactions with the rock. In this work, we perform numerical simulations considering a two-phase two-component flow model including time-dependent wettability alteration in a two-dimensional aquifer-caprock system using the open porous media framework. Particularly, we study the spatial distribution over time of injected CO2 into the aquifer neglecting and including wettability alteration effects. The numerical simulations show that wettability alteration on the caprock results in a loss of containment; however, the CO2 front into the caprock advances very slow since the unexposed caprock along the vertical migration path also needs to be changed by the slow wettability alteration process. The simulations also show that wettability alteration on the aquifer results in an enhancement of storage efficiency; this since the CO2 front migrates more slowly and the capillary entry pressure decreases after wettability alteration.