| Authors |
S.M. Kang, E. Fathi, R.J. Ambrose, I.Y. Akkutlu, and R.F. Sigal, The
University of Oklahoma
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Summary
This paper presents an experimental study on the ability of
organic-rich-shale core samples to store carbon dioxide (CO2). An
apparatus has been built for precise measurements of gas pressure and volumes
at constant temperature. A new analytical methodology is developed allowing
interpretation of the pressure/volume data in terms of measurements of total
porosity and Langmuir parameters of core plugs. The method considers
pore-volume compressibility and sorption effects and allows small gas-leakage
adjustments at high pressures. Total gas-storage capacity for pure
CO2 is measured at supercritical conditions as a function of pore
pressure under constant reservoir-confining pressure. It is shown that,
although widely known as an impermeable sedimentary rock with low porosity,
organic shale has the ability to store significant amount of gas permanently
because of trapping of the gas in an adsorbed state within its finely dispersed
organic matter (i.e., kerogen). The latter is a nanoporous material with mainly
micropores (< 2 nm) and mesopores (2 - 50 nm). Storage in organic-rich
shale has added advantages because the organic matter acts as a molecular
sieve, allowing CO2--with linear molecular geometry?to reside in
small pores that the other naturally occurring gases cannot access. In
addition, the molecular-interaction energy between the organics and
CO2 molecules is different, which leads to enhanced adsorption of
CO2. Hence, affinity of shale to CO2 is partly because of
steric and thermodynamic effects similar to those of coals that are being
considered for enhanced coalbed-methane recovery.
Mass-transport paths and the mechanisms of gas uptake are unlike those of
coals, however. Once at the fracture/matrix interface, the injected gas faces a
geomechanically strong porous medium with a dual (organic/inorganic) pore
system and, therefore, has choices of path for its flow and transport into the
matrix: the gas molecules (1) dissolve into the organic material and diffuse
through a nanopore network and (2) enter the inorganic material and flow
through a network of irregularly shaped voids. Although gas could reach the
organic pores deep in the shale formation following both paths, the application
of the continua approximation requires that the gas-flow system be near or
beyond the percolation threshold for a consistent theoretical framework. Here,
using gas permeation experiments and history matching pressure-pulse decay, we
show that a large portion of the injected gas reaches the organic pores through
the inorganic matrix. This is consistent with scanning-electron-microscope
(SEM) images that do not show connectivity of the organic material on scales
larger than tens of microns. It indicates an in-series coupling of the dual
continua in shale. The inorganic matrix permeability, therefore, is predicted
to be less, typically on the order of 10 nd. More importantly, although
transport in the inorganic matrix is viscous (Darcy) flow, transport in the
organic pores is not due to flow but mainly to molecular transport mechanisms:
pore and surface diffusion.
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