Abstract

Abstract. An essential part of the collaborative research project H2STORE (hydrogen to store), which is funded by the German government, was a comparison of various analytical methods for characterizing reservoir sandstones from different stratigraphic units. In this context Permian, Triassic and Tertiary reservoir sandstones were analysed. Rock core materials, provided by RWE Gasspeicher GmbH (Dortmund, Germany), GDF Suez E&P Deutschland GmbH (Lingen, Germany), E.ON Gas Storage GmbH (Essen, Germany) and RAG Rohöl-Aufsuchungs Aktiengesellschaft (Vienna, Austria), were processed by different laboratory techniques; thin sections were prepared, rock fragments were crushed and cubes of 1 cm edge length and plugs 3 to 5 cm in length with a diameter of about 2.5 cm were sawn from macroscopic homogeneous cores. With this prepared sample material, polarized light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy, coupled with image analyses, specific surface area measurements (after Brunauer, Emmet and Teller, 1938; BET), He-porosity and N2-permeability measurements and high-resolution microcomputer tomography (μ-CT), which were used for numerical simulations, were applied. All these methods were practised on most of the same sample material, before and on selected Permian sandstones also after static CO2 experiments under reservoir conditions. A major concern in comparing the results of these methods is an appraisal of the reliability of the given porosity, permeability and mineral-specific reactive (inner) surface area data. The CO2 experiments modified the petrophysical as well as the mineralogical/geochemical rock properties. These changes are detectable by all applied analytical methods. Nevertheless, a major outcome of the high-resolution μ-CT analyses and following numerical data simulations was that quite similar data sets and data interpretations were maintained by the different petrophysical standard methods. Moreover, the μ-CT analyses are not only time saving, but also non-destructive. This is an important point if only minor sample material is available and a detailed comparison before and after the experimental tests on micrometre pore scale of specific rock features is envisaged.

Highlights

  • The globally rising carbon dioxide emissions associated with increasing climate extremes are intensively discussed by government authorities, scientists, industrial representatives and the public

  • The mean helium porosity measurements revealed an increase in total porosity of 16.0 % and the calculated μ-CT data one of 12.6 % because of the CO2 experiments

  • This study confirms that high-resolution computer tomography is a suitable method for verifying data from petrophysical standard methods as well as for identifying alteration of various mineral phases of sandstone samples induced during CO2 batch experiments

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Summary

Introduction

The globally rising carbon dioxide emissions associated with increasing climate extremes are intensively discussed by government authorities, scientists, industrial representatives and the public. The target of the intended so-called German Energiewende is a shift in energy production based on fossil fuels and nuclear power to renewable energy sources (e.g. wind, solar) As part of these debates and transformation processes the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) funded the hydrogen to store project (H2STORE). S. Henkel et al.: X-ray CT analyses, models and numerical simulations hydrogen and carbon dioxide autoclave batch experiments (Pudlo et al, 2013, 2015; Henkel, 2016). Henkel et al.: X-ray CT analyses, models and numerical simulations hydrogen and carbon dioxide autoclave batch experiments (Pudlo et al, 2013, 2015; Henkel, 2016) Such reactions were investigated by autoclave experiments at reservoir temperatures and pressures, using non-corrosive autoclaves and fluids similar to reservoir-specific formation fluids. The utilization of CO2 combined with H2 injection into the geological underground for the “green methane” generation (Šmigiánet al., 1990), enforced by microorganism activity (Panfilov, 2010), demands further research regarding the potential CO2–biotic-mineral-formation-fluid reactions

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