2012
DOI: 10.1021/es3012222
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Injection of CO2-Saturated Water through a Siliceous Sandstone Plug from the Hontomin Test Site (Spain): Experiment and Modeling

Abstract: Massive chemical reactions are not expected when injecting CO(2) in siliceous sandstone reservoirs, but their performance can be challenged by small-scale reactions and other processes affecting their transport properties. We have conducted a core flooding test with a quartzarenite plug of Lower Cretaceous age representative of the secondary reservoir of the Hontomín test site. The sample, confined at high pressure, was successively injected with DIW and CO(2)-saturated DIW for 49 days while monitoring geophys… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…In reservoirs where the in situ stress state is lower than the yield stress, dissolution may result in porosity increase, as evidenced by this study, and therefore permeability increases . This is the case of the unstressed CO 2 ‐brine reaction experiments conducted in this study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In reservoirs where the in situ stress state is lower than the yield stress, dissolution may result in porosity increase, as evidenced by this study, and therefore permeability increases . This is the case of the unstressed CO 2 ‐brine reaction experiments conducted in this study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alteration of rocks with CO 2 ‐brine in the laboratory also results in measurable changes in geomechanical and transport properties, such as increased permeability and porosity, dissolution of siliceous and carbonate minerals, reduction of indentation stiffness, reduction of fracture toughness, and decrease of the size of yield stress locus . Changes are more impactful in rocks with load‐bearing dissolvable minerals or clay cements sensitive to pore‐fluid chemistry …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mineral dissolution includes both direct dissolution (mainly of carbonates, e.g. Kj¿ller et al 2011;Canal et al 2013;Jun et al 2013) and hydrolysis of feldspars and phyllosilicates leading to precipitation of clays and other secondary silicate minerals (Lin et al 2008;Hangx and Spiers 2009). Precipitation of secondary carbonates is likely to take place further away, after the initial acidification of formation waters has been neutralized and silicate reactions have disturbed the initial carbonate-fluid equilibrium (Bateman et al 2010).…”
Section: Experimental Techniquesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Canal et al (2013) measured changes in porosity due to calcite dissolution and found a marked increase in permeability and changes to seismic velocities. Bachaud et al (2011) measured increased porosity in limestone caprock; in contrast, permeability remained low in these experiments.…”
Section: Reservoir and Cap Rocksmentioning
confidence: 99%
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