http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1750583615001565

Time-lapse pressure tomography for characterizing CO2 plume evolution in a
deep saline aquifer
Linwei Hu
Peter Bayer
Ralf Brauchler

Highlights
•
A series of interference fluid injection tests is modeled.
•
Flow properties of CO2-brine mixture are evaluated by a single-phase proxy.
•
CO2 plume propagation is delineated by applying pressure tomography in a
time-lapse strategy.
•
Saturation of inverted plume is estimated by calibrated value of specific
storage.

Abstract
A time-lapse pressure tomography inversion approach is applied to
characterize the CO2 plume development in a virtual deep saline aquifer.
Deep CO2 injection leads to flow properties of the mixed-phase, which vary
depending on the CO2 saturation. Analogous to the crossed ray paths of a
seismic tomographic experiment, pressure tomography creates streamline
patterns by injecting brine prior to CO2 injection or by injecting small
amounts of CO2 into the two-phase (brine and CO2) system at different
depths. In a first step, the introduced pressure responses at observation
locations are utilized for a computationally rapid and efficient eikonal
equation based inversion to reconstruct the heterogeneity of the subsurface
with diffusivity (D) tomograms. Information about the plume shape can be
derived by comparing D-tomograms of the aquifer at different times. In a
second step, the aquifer is subdivided into two zones of constant values of
hydraulic conductivity (K) and specific storage (Ss) through a clustering
approach. For the CO2 plume, mixed-phase K and Ss values are estimated by
minimizing the difference between calculated and “true” pressure responses
using a single-phase flow simulator to reduce the computing complexity.
Finally, the estimated flow property is converted to gas saturation by a
single-phase proxy, which represents an integrated value of the plume. This
novel approach is tested first with a doublet well configuration, and it
reveals a great potential of pressure tomography based concepts for
characterizing and monitoring deep aquifers, as well as the evolution of a
CO2 plume. Still, field-testing will be required for better assessing the
applicability of this approach.

Keywords
Two-phase flow in porous mediaMixed-phase flowDeep saline aquiferPressure
tomographyCO2 plume monitoring

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