Abstract

The risk of CO2 leakage from damaged wellbore is identified as a critical issue for the feasibility and environmental acceptance of CO2 underground storage. For instance, Portland cement can be altered if flow of CO2-rich water occurs in hydraulic discontinuities such as cement-tubing or cement-caprock interfaces. In this case, the raw cement matrix is altered by diffusion of the solutes. This fact leads to the formation of distinctive alteration fronts indicating the dissolution of portlandite, the formation of a carbonate-rich layer and the decalcification of the calcium silicate hydrate, controlled by the interplay between the reaction kinetics, the diffusion-controlled renewing of the reactants and products, and the changes in the diffusion properties caused by the changes in porosity induced by the dissolution and precipitation mechanisms. In principle, these mass transfers can be easily simulated using diffusion-reaction numerical models. However, the large uncertainties of the parameters characterizing the reaction rates (mainly the kinetic and thermodynamic coefficients and the evolving reactive surface area) and of the porosity-dependent diffusion properties prevent making reliable predictions required for risk assessment. In this paper, we present the results of a set of experiments consisting in the alteration of a holed disk of class-G cement in contact with a CO2-rich brine at reservoir conditions (P = 12 MPa and T = 60 °C) for various durations. This new experimental protocol allows producing time-resolved data for both the spatially distributed mass transfers inside the cement body and the total mass transfers inferred from the boundary conditions mass balance. The experimental results are used to study the effect of the fluid salinity and the pCO2 on the overall reaction efficiency. Experiments at high salinity triggers more portlandite dissolution, thinner carbonate layers, and larger alteration areas than those at low salinity. These features are accompanied with different spatial distribution of the alteration layers resulting from a complex interplay between salinity-controlled dissolution and precipitation mechanisms. Conversely, the effect of the pCO2 is more intuitive: Increasing pCO2 results in increasing the overall alteration rate without modifying the relative distribution of the reaction fronts.

Highlights

  • Procedures for installing Portland-type cement annulus at depth profit from decades of experience in oil industry

  • Similar conclusions were formulated by Crow et al 2009 [10] who concluded from downhole tests and laboratory measurements of cement cores extracted from CO2 /EOR fields that the smallness of the fluid migration along the wellbore cements could be related to carbonation of the cement that ensure low permeability and tightness of the cement-casing and cement-formation interfaces

  • Several studies based on batch and flow-through experiments showed that the Portland-type cements commonly employed in well completion operations react with carbonate-rich brines weakening the cement and altering its permeability [8,11,12,13,14,15,16]

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Summary

Introduction

Procedures for installing Portland-type cement annulus at depth profit from decades of experience in oil industry. It is still a challenging task due to the large variability of natural environments, the limited resolution of the techniques is usually used to evaluate the quality of the cement before exploitation and the problems associated to monitor possible changes of the cement properties during the exploitation of the well [1,2]. Abandoned wells located within the zone of storage are a potential source of Geosciences 2018, 8, 490; doi:10.3390/geosciences8120490 www.mdpi.com/journal/geosciences. Leakages can occur at the caprock-cement interface, at the cement-casing interface, through the cement annulus itself or through the cement plug in the case of abandoned wells [5]

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