The chemical dissolution and physical migration of minerals induced during CO2 laboratory experiments: their relevance for reservoir quality

The characterization of the quality and storage capacity of geological underground reservoirs is one of the most important and challenging tasks for the realization of carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects. One approach for such an evaluation is the upscaling of data sets achieved by laboratory CO2 batch experiments to field scale. (Sub)-microscopic, petrophysical, tomographic, and chemical analytical methods were applied to reservoir sandstone samples from the Altmark gas field before and after static autoclave batch experiments at reservoir-specific conditions to study the relevance of injected CO2 on reservoir quality. These investigations confirmed that the chemical dissolution of pore-filling mineral phases (carbonate, anhydrite), associated with an increased exposure of clay mineral surfaces and the physical detachment and mobilization of such clay fines (illite, chlorite) are most appropriate to modify the quality of storage sites. Thereby the complex interplay of both processes will affect the porosity and permeability in opposite ways—mineral dissolution will enhance the rock porosity (and permeability), but fine migration can deteriorate the permeability. These reactions are realized down to ~µm scale and will affect the fluid–rock reactivity of the reservoirs, their injectivity and recovery rates during CO2 storage operations.

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