Litcius/Paper detail

Compositional Modeling to Analyze the Effect of CH4 on Coupled Carbon Storage and Enhanced Oil Recovery Process

Jinhyung Cho, Gayoung Park, Seoyoon Kwon, Kun Lee, Hye Jin Lee, Baehyun Min

2020Applied Sciences17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The present study is aimed at the development of compositional simulation models of the co-injection of CO2 and CH4 during the water-alternating-gas (WAG) process in order to assess the efficiency of carbon capture and storage in combination with enhanced oil recovery (CCS-EOR). The co-injection of CO2 and CH4 occupies more reservoir pore volume and causes higher reservoir pressure than CO2 WAG, thus leading to an enhanced early EOR performance. However, the overall EOR performance of the co-injection method becomes lower than that of CO2 WAG due to the reduced miscibility and sweep efficiency upon further CH4 addition. The decrease in gas displacement and sweep efficiency weaken the hysteresis effects upon the residual trapping mechanism. However, the solubility trapping mechanism takes effect because the co-injection generates higher average reservoir pressure than does the CO2 WAG. The index of global warming potential (GWP) in a mole unit is employed to quantify the carbon storage effects of CO2 and co-injection WAG cases. According to the index, 1 mole of CH4 sequestration has the same effects as that of 10 moles of CO2 for global warming mitigation. In conclusion, the carbon storage effects are enhanced as CH4 concentration in the WAG increases.

Topics & Concepts

Enhanced oil recoveryCarbon dioxidePetroleum engineeringResidual oilCarbon capture and storage (timeline)Carbon sequestrationEnvironmental scienceMaterials scienceChemistryClimate changeGeologyOceanographyOrganic chemistryCO2 Sequestration and Geologic InteractionsEnhanced Oil Recovery TechniquesHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis