Abstract

As an important part of carbon dioxide capture, utilization and storage (CCUS), the progress of injecting CO2 into oil reservoirs could increase the recovery rate and achieve large-scale carbon storage. It has become one of the most important carbon storage methods around the world. This paper selected the tight sandstone of the fourth member of the Quantou Formation in the southern Songliao Basin to carry out a CO2 storage physical simulation experiment. Representative samples were collected at 24 h, 72 h, 192 h and 432 h to study the CO2 water-rock interaction and to analyze the mineral composition, pore structure and the evolutionary characteristics of physical reservoir properties over time. Physical property analysis, Ion analysis, X-ray diffraction mineral analysis, QEMSCAN mineral analysis, scanning electron microscopy and high-resolution CT scanning techniques were adopted. The main points of understanding were: (i) It shows a differential evolution of different minerals following the storage time of CO2, and carbonate minerals are mainly dissolved with ankerite as a typical representation; a small amount of calcite is formed in 24 h, and dissolved in the later period; feldspar and quartz were partially dissolved; clay mineral precipitation blocked the pores and gaps; (ii) The evolution in mineral variation leads to the complexity of pore structure evolution, following a trend of “small pores decreasing and large pores increasing” with extending storage time. The final porosity and permeability ratios gradually increase from 4.07% to 21.31% and from 2.97% to 70.06% respectively; (iii) There is a negative correlation between the increasing ratio and the original physical properties of the tight stones due to the dissolution of ankerite. Relevant research could provide scientific guidance and technical support for the geological storage of CO2 in lacustrine tight continental sandstones and the development of CCUS technology.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call