TY - JOUR
T1 - Permanent CO2 Trapping through Localized and Chemical Gradient-Driven Basalt Carbonation
AU - Menefee, Anne H.
AU - Giammar, Daniel E.
AU - Ellis, Brian R.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Award DE-FE0023382, the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under Grant No. DGE 1256260, and in part by an appointment from the National Energy Technology Laboratory Research Participation Program, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy and administered by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science. We would like to thank Rachel Wells, Wei Xiong, and Philip Skemer (Washington University in St. Louis) for their help with sample preparation. xCT data was produced in the CTEES facility at the University of Michigan, supported by the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences and College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. Sample characterization via SEM was conducted at the Michigan Center for Materials Characterization with financial support from the University of Michigan College of Engineering.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/8/7
Y1 - 2018/8/7
N2 - Recent laboratory and field studies have demonstrated that basalt formations may present one of the most secure repositories for anthropogenic CO2 emissions through carbon mineralization. In this work, a series of high-temperature, high-pressure core flooding experiments was conducted to investigate how transport limitations, reservoir temperature, and brine chemistry impact carbonation reactions following injection of CO2-rich aqueous fluids into fractured basalts. At 100 °C and 6.3 mM [NaHCO3], representative of typical reservoir conditions, carbonate precipitates were highly localized on reactive mineral grains contributing key divalent cations. Geochemical gradients promoted localized reaction fronts of secondary precipitates that were consistent with 2D reactive transport model predictions. Increasing [NaHCO3] to 640 mM dramatically enhanced carbonation in diffusion-limited zones, but an associated increase in clays filling advection-controlled flow paths could ultimately obstruct flow and limit sequestration capacity under such conditions. Carbonate and clay precipitation were further enhanced at 150 °C, reducing the pre-reaction fracture volume by 48% compared to 35% at 100 °C. Higher temperature also produced more carbonate-driven fracture bridging, which generally increased with diffusion distance into dead-end fractures. In combination, the results are consistent with field tests indicating that mineralization will predominate in buffered diffusion-limited zones adjacent to bulk flow paths and that alkaline reservoirs with strong geothermal gradients will enhance the extent of carbon trapping.
AB - Recent laboratory and field studies have demonstrated that basalt formations may present one of the most secure repositories for anthropogenic CO2 emissions through carbon mineralization. In this work, a series of high-temperature, high-pressure core flooding experiments was conducted to investigate how transport limitations, reservoir temperature, and brine chemistry impact carbonation reactions following injection of CO2-rich aqueous fluids into fractured basalts. At 100 °C and 6.3 mM [NaHCO3], representative of typical reservoir conditions, carbonate precipitates were highly localized on reactive mineral grains contributing key divalent cations. Geochemical gradients promoted localized reaction fronts of secondary precipitates that were consistent with 2D reactive transport model predictions. Increasing [NaHCO3] to 640 mM dramatically enhanced carbonation in diffusion-limited zones, but an associated increase in clays filling advection-controlled flow paths could ultimately obstruct flow and limit sequestration capacity under such conditions. Carbonate and clay precipitation were further enhanced at 150 °C, reducing the pre-reaction fracture volume by 48% compared to 35% at 100 °C. Higher temperature also produced more carbonate-driven fracture bridging, which generally increased with diffusion distance into dead-end fractures. In combination, the results are consistent with field tests indicating that mineralization will predominate in buffered diffusion-limited zones adjacent to bulk flow paths and that alkaline reservoirs with strong geothermal gradients will enhance the extent of carbon trapping.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.est.8b01814
DO - 10.1021/acs.est.8b01814
M3 - Article
C2 - 29983056
AN - SCOPUS:85049897160
SN - 0013-936X
VL - 52
SP - 8954
EP - 8964
JO - Environmental Science & Technology
JF - Environmental Science & Technology
IS - 15
ER -