Wettability
is a key reservoir characteristic influencing geological
carbon sequestration (GCS) processes, such as CO2 transport
and storage capacity. Wettability is often determined on a limited
number of reservoir samples by measuring the contact angle at the
CO2/brine/mineral interface, but the ability to predict
this value remains a challenge. In this work, minerals comprising
a natural reservoir sample were identified, and the influence of their
surface roughness and mineralogy on the contact angle was quantified
to evaluate predictive models and controlling mechanisms. The natural
sample was obtained from the Mount Simon formation, a representative
siliciclastic reservoir that is the site of a United States Department
of Energy CO2 injection project. A thin section of the
Mount Simon sandstone was examined with compound light microscopy
and environmental scanning electron microscopy (ESEM) coupled with
energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS). Quartz and feldspar were
identified as dominant minerals and were coated with various reddish
black precipitates consistent with illite clay and iron oxide hematite.
Contact angle (θ) measurements were conducted for the four representative
minerals and the Mount Simon sample over a range of pressures (2–25
MPa) at 40 °C. At supercritical conditions, all samples are strongly
water-wet, with contact angles between 27° and 45°. Several
predictive models for contact angle were evaluated for the mineral
and Mount Simon samples, including the Wenzel and Cassie–Baxter
models, plus newly proposed modifications of these that account for
the fraction of different minerals comprising the reservoir sample
surface, the surface roughness, and the extent that roughness pits
are filled with brine. Modeling results suggest that the fraction
of mineral surfaces containing roughness pits filled with brine is
the most important reservoir characteristic that controls wettability
in the Mount Simon sandstone, followed by surface mineralogy. To our
knowledge, this is one of the few studies to investigate the effects
of individual minerals on the wettability of a natural reservoir sample.
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