Publication | Closed Access
The effect of drainage on the capillary retention of CO<sub>2</sub> in a layered permeable rock
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Citations
16
References
2008
Year
EngineeringWater-rock InteractionLayered Permeable RockEarth SciencePetroleum ReservoirBuoyant PlumesCo2 Miscible FloodingLower Permeability BoundaryCarbon SequestrationCo2 Immiscible FloodingGeologyCarbon SinkMultiphase FlowLower PermeabilityRock PropertiesPore StructureCapillary RetentionCivil EngineeringGeochemistry
Buoyant plumes of CO 2 spreading through water-saturated permeable rock, bounded by layers of lower permeability, tend to spread laterally. As they advance, they may gradually leak through fractures or discontinuities in the lower permeability boundary, leading to a gradual waning of the original plume and dispersal of CO 2 higher in the formation. With a finite release of CO 2 , the trailing edge of the plume recedes with time, and capillary forces tend to trap a fraction of this CO 2 within the pore space. This also leads to a gradual waning of the plume with time and limits the mass of CO 2 which can leak through the boundary and rise higher into the formation. We explore the balance between these two effects and calculate some of the controls on the fraction of the CO 2 plume which becomes trapped within the original layer of rock.
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