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Abstract
A rise in carbon dioxide levels from industrial emissions is contributing to
the greenhouse effect and global warming. CO2 sequestration in saline aquifers
is a strategy to reduce atmospheric CO2 levels. Scientists and researchers rely
on numerical simulators to predict CO2 storage by modeling the fluid transport
behaviour.
Studies have shown that after CO2 is injected into a saline aquifer,
undissolved CO2 rises due to buoyant forces and will spread laterally away from
the injection site under an area of low permeability. CO2 from this ‘capped’
region diffuses into the fluid underlying it, and the resulting CO2-fluid
mixture increases in density. This increase in density leads to gravity-driven
convection. Accordingly, diffusive-convective transport is important to model
since it predicts an enhanced storage capacity of the saline aquifer.
This work incorporates the diffusive and convective transport processes into
the transport modeling equation, and uses a self-generated code. Discretization
of the domain is done with a cell-centered finite difference method. Cases are
set up using similar parameters from published literature in order to compare
results. Enhanced storage capacity is predicted in this work, similar to work
done by others. A difference in the onset of convective transport between this
work and published results is noticed and discussed in this paper.
A sensitivity analysis is performed on the density model used in this work,
and on the diffusivity value assumed. The analysis shows that the density model
and diffusivity value is a key component on simulation results. Also,
perturbations are added to porosity and permeability in order to see the effect
of perturbations on the onset of convection, and results agree with similar
findings by others.
This work provides a basis for studying other cases, such as the impact of
heterogeneity on the diffusion-convective transport. An extension of this work
may involve the use of an equation of state to predict CO2 solubility at
thermodynamic conditions, and studying the impact of salinity on CO2
solubility.
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