http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1875510015000694

Journal of Natural Gas Science and Engineering
May 2015, Vol.24:64–79, doi:10.1016/j.jngse.2015.02.011
Determination of effective stress parameters for effective CO2 permeability
in deep saline aquifers: An experimental study

Highlights
•
Effective stress parameters of deep saline reservoir rocks are investigated.
•
Tri-axial permeability tests on brine-saturated sandstones are performed.
•
The effective stress coefficient decreases with increasing aquifer salinity.
•
The depositions of NaCl crystals in the rock pore space were observed.

Abstract

Global warming has been a major threat to the world for many decades, and
CO2 geo-sequestration in deep saline aquifers has recently been identified
as an effective solution due to its ability to greatly mitigate
anthropogenic CO2 emissions to the atmosphere. However, CO2
sequestration-induced chemical and mineralogical reactions affect the
hydro-mechanical characteristics of natural formations, resulting in
limited injectability to aquifers. A detailed knowledge of the
hydro-mechanical behaviour of natural formations is therefore important to
enhance the safety and effectiveness of the CO2 storage process. Such
understanding can only be gained on the basis of in-depth knowledge of the
applied effective stresses on the formations. The aim of this study was
therefore to understand the effect of reservoir salinity level on the
effective stress parameters of deep saline aquifer rock under various
in-situ conditions, including salinity levels ranging from 0 to 30% (NaCl
concentration by weight) and confining pressures ranging 20–35 MPa.
Tri-axial permeability tests were conducted for a range of injection
pressures (1–12 MPa) under different confining pressures (20, 25, 30 and 35
MPa) at 35 °C constant temperature. Comprehensive SEM (scanning electron
microscopy) and acoustic emission analyses were also conducted to clarify
the observed results.

According to the results, the effective stress coefficient (α) for CO2
permeability decreases with increasing aquifer salinity level, and
increasing salinity level from 0 to 30% causes the effective stress
coefficient to be reduced by 31%. Moreover, the Skempton coefficient (B)
increases with increasing salinity level from 0 to 30% and the increment is
about 18%. Interestingly, the poro-elastic coupling parameter (αB)
decreases from 0.89 to 0.72 as the salinity level increases from 0 to 30%
and the reduction is about 19%. The SEM analysis conducted on tested
samples confirmed the deposition of NaCl crystals in rock pore space during
the saturation period of one year, and these observed variations in
effective stress parameters are probably due to the NaCl crystal deposition
in the rock pore space. This significantly alters the rock porosity and
pore geometry, causing the simple effective stress law for CO2 permeability
to be inapplicable to saline aquifers.

Keywords
CO2 sequestration
Saline aquifers
Permeability
Effective stress parameters

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