Abstract
Investigating the coal adsorption behavior on supercritical CO2 (ScCO2) is crucial for long-term CO2 geological storage. In this paper, low-permeability coal samples from the Huainan-Huaibei coalfields in China were selected. The high-pressure isothermal adsorption of CO2 was carried out at 36, 42, and 48 °C. The results of adsorption experiments were analyzed by fitting 9 types of modified adsorption models, including three different adsorption theories. Considering that different adsorption mechanisms may exist for CO2 in coal, 14 mixed adsorption models were established. The accuracy of the coefficient of determination (R2) and root-mean-square error (RMSE) for ScCO2 excess adsorption capacity was analyzed, mainly focusing on the accuracy of the key model parameters such as the adsorption phase density and the theoretical adsorption capacity. These parameters were discussed, combined with the predicted adsorption phase density of CO2 based on the intercept method. The results indicate that among the 9 types of modified adsorption considered, based on the adsorption phase density screening, the deviation of the predicted adsorption capacity from the experimental value was then considered. The Dubinin-Radushkevich (DR) model can effectively fit the adsorption behavior of CO2 at low pressure (<7.5 MPa). The Langmuir (L), Langmuir-Freundlich (LF), Extended-Langmuir (EL), and TOTH models can effectively fit the adsorption behavior of CO2 at high pressure (7.5-20 MPa), while the multimolecular layer models were unsuitable for fitting ScCO2 adsorption. The model fitting results showed that only the monomolecular layer and micropore-filled adsorption models were suitable for fitting the ScCO2 adsorption capacity. The DR-LF model best fits the adsorption data based on its key parameters of adsorption phase density and theoretical adsorption capacity. The established mixed model DR-LF fitting results showed that the CO2 in coal was dominated by microporous filling adsorption. The higher the temperature, the greater the contribution of microporous filling adsorption to the total adsorption. There still exists deviation in the adsorption phase density and theoretical adsorption capacity. The contribution percentage of different adsorption mechanisms of CO2 in coal needs to be further investigated.
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