Pore-scale imaging of hydrogen and methane storage in fractured aquifer rock: The impact of gas type on relative permeability
Sojwal Manoorkar, G\"ulce Kalyoncu, Hamdi Omar, Soetkin Barbaix, Dominique Ceursters, Maxime Latinis, Stefanie Van Offenwert, Tom Bultreys

TL;DR
This study compares hydrogen, methane, and nitrogen flow in fractured aquifer rocks, revealing hydrogen and methane have similar low relative permeability, impacting underground hydrogen storage modeling and safety assessments.
Contribution
It provides the first direct experimental comparison of hydrogen and natural gas flow in fractured rocks, highlighting differences from nitrogen and implications for storage.
Findings
Hydrogen and methane exhibit similar low relative permeability curves.
Nitrogen's relative permeability is significantly higher than hydrogen and methane.
Periodic pressure fluctuations indicate complex fluid connectivity for hydrogen and methane.
Abstract
Underground hydrogen storage in saline aquifers is a potential solution for seasonal renewable energy storage. Among potential storage sites, facilities used for underground natural gas storage have advantages, including well-characterized cyclical injection-withdrawal behavior and partially reusable infrastructure. However, the differences between hydrogen-brine and natural gas-brine flow, particularly through fractures in the reservoir and the sealing caprock, remain unclear due to the complexity of two-phase flow. Therefore, we investigate fracture relative permeability for hydrogen versus methane (natural gas) and nitrogen (commonly used in laboratories). Steady-state relative permeability experiments were conducted at 10 MPa on fractured carbonate rock from the Loenhout natural gas storage in Belgium, where gas flows through {\textmu}m-to-mm scale fractures. Our results reveal that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Hydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir Analysis · CO2 Sequestration and Geologic Interactions
