Fundamental Investigation of Reactive-Convective Transport: Implications for Long-Term Carbon dioxide (CO2) Sequestration
Md Fahim Shahriar, Aaditya Khanal (The Jasper Department of Chemical, Engineering, The University of Texas at Tyler)

TL;DR
This study visualizes and analyzes the mechanisms of density-driven convective transport of CO2 in saline aquifers, revealing how salts, flow conditions, and heterogeneities influence dissolution rates and flow patterns relevant to long-term sequestration.
Contribution
It provides experimental insights into the effects of salts, flow rates, and heterogeneities on CO2 convection and dissolution, advancing understanding of long-term storage processes.
Findings
Salts cause earlier convection onset and larger finger wavelengths.
Dipping enhances lateral mixing of CO2 fingers.
Salt presence reduces CO2 dissolution rate but increases diffusive flux.
Abstract
The density-driven convection coupled with chemical reaction is the preferred mechanism for permanently storing CO2 in saline aquifers. This study uses a 2D visual Hele-Shaw cell to evaluate and visualize the density-driven convection formed due to gravitational instabilities, also known as Rayleigh-Taylor instability. The primary goal of the experiments is to understand the various mechanisms for the mass transfer of gaseous CO2 into brine with different initial ionic concentrations and flow permeability. Moreover, the impact of CO2 flow rates, injection locations, reservoir dipping angle, and permeability heterogeneity is also investigated. We observed that the presence of salts resulted in earlier onset of convection and a larger convective finger wavelength than the case with no dissolved salts. In addition, experimental data showed a higher lateral mixing between CO2 fingers when…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCO2 Sequestration and Geologic Interactions · Hydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir Analysis · Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques
