Leakage Processes in Damaged Shale: In Situ Measurements of Permeability, CO$_2$-Sorption Behavior and Acoustic Properties
J. William Carey, Ronny Pini, Manika Prasad, Luke P. Frash, Sanyog, Kumar

TL;DR
This paper investigates the permeability, CO2 sorption, and acoustic properties of damaged shale to assess caprock integrity and leakage risks in CO2 storage, highlighting experimental findings on permeability differences and detection methods.
Contribution
It provides new in situ measurements of permeability, sorption behavior, and acoustic responses of damaged shale, advancing understanding of caprock integrity in CO2 sequestration.
Findings
Permeability varies by up to three orders of magnitude between brittle and ductile fractures.
CO2 sorption onto shale may mitigate leakage in damaged caprock.
CO2 saturation significantly reduces the bulk modulus of shale, detectable via acoustic methods.
Abstract
Caprock integrity is one of the chief concerns in the successful development of a CO storage site. In this chapter, we provide an overview of the permeability of fractured shale, the potential for mitigation of CO leakage by sorption to shale, and the detection by acoustic methods of CO infiltration into shale. Although significant concerns have been raised about the potential for induced seismicity to damage caprock, relatively little is known about the permeability of the damaged shale. We present a summary of recent experimental work that shows profound differences in permeability of up to three orders of magnitude between brittle and ductile fracture permeability. In the ductile regime, it is possible that shale caprock could accommodate deformation without a significant loss of CO from the storage reservoir. In cases where CO does migrate through damaged shale…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis · Hydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir Analysis · CO2 Sequestration and Geologic Interactions
