Abstract

CO2 geological storage has been proposed as one method to mitigate climate change. Storage of CO2 in depleted oil or gas fields is one option, potentially following enhanced recovery. Understanding the potential impacts of CO2 water rock reactions is an important aspect of storage feasibility studies. Drill core samples of sandstones and mudstones from the Jurassic Moonie oil field, Australia, were characterised. In the Precipice Sandstone reservoir samples pore throats had broad size distributions, with mercury intrusion porosities 6.2 to 14.6%. Evergreen Formation samples were more variable with 1.2 to 16.1% porosity. Porosities measured by QEMSCAN were in reasonable agreement at 8.6 to 15.3% for Precipice Sandstones, and 0.6 to 21.5 for the Evergreen Formation. Sandstones had larger pore throat sizes and lower threshold pressures indicative of good reservoir rocks. Calcite cemented sandstones had truncated pore throat distributions, and the coal and clay rich mudstones had pore throats <0.1 μm with higher threshold pressures likely to seal or baffle CO2. Quartz grains were naturally fractured, with silica, apatite, rutile, calcite, and siderite cements filling porosity in some samples. Feldspars had been weathered producing secondary porosity but also resulting in kaolinite and illite filling intergranular porosity. Pyrite and barite were mainly associated with coals. Synchrotron X-ray fluorescence mapping showed Sr was mainly hosted in calcite cement, apatite and barite; with Rb in both plagioclase and K-feldspars. Calcite mainly hosted Mn; while Zn and Cu were mainly in sulphides. Sulphide minerals in coal also hosted As in one core. Kinetic geochemical CO2-water-rock modelling using the characterisation data over 30 or 1000 years indicated reaction of carbonate minerals where present, and alteration of mainly plagioclase, K-feldspar and chlorite. Net precipitation of ankerite, calcite or siderite mineral trapped 0.23 to 1.28 kg/m3 of CO2 after 1000 years in the different rock packages and was highest in Evergreen Formation rocks. The predicted pH was in the range 5.0 to 5.4 after 1000 years, or higher at 5.2 to 7.1 in lower CO2 fugacity models. Sandstone reactivity was overall low over 30 years indicating a low likelihood of reservoir scaling which would be favourable, with mineral trapping likely in the overlying Evergreen Formation.

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