Upscaling of upward CO 2 migration in 2D system
Abstract:
A procedure for upscaling CO <inf>2</inf> buoyancy driven upward migration in finite-difference simulation models is presented in this work. This upscaling procedure accounts for capillary and buoyancy forces to enable CO <inf>2</inf> upward migration modeling in coarser grids while accounting for dominant fine-scaled geological effects. The developed method is applied to 2D domains with no-flow boundary conditions. The absolute permeability field is correlated in the horizontal direction, with zero correlation in the vertical direction. Capillary pressure is parameterized using a Leveret J-function. A Dykstra-Parsons coefficient of 0.7 was used to generate a relatively heterogeneous absolute permeability field and hence test the developed algorithm under more stringent conditions. Multiphase flow upscaling is improved by accounting for spatial connectivity (percolation), which enables us to obtain more realistic rock-fluid pseudo-functions and capture effects of local capillary trapping at the fine scale (meso-scale trapping). The upscaling method and estimation of rock-fluid functions are numerically tested and compared with currently accepted single and multiphase flow upscaling methods. Results show that single-phase flow upscaling is insufficient, because it fails to adequately predict mobility and residual saturation, and hence multiphase flow upscaling should be employed. Significant improvement in gas travel time (representative of mobility) and trapped CO <inf>2</inf> saturation (representative of trapped saturation) are observed when spatial connectivity (percolation) is included. The simulation execution time reduces 17-fold through upscaling. This speedup will enable simulating 3D CO <inf>2</inf> sequestration simulation scenarios. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.
Año de publicación:
2012
Keywords:
- Buoyancy
- Capillarity
- CO 2 storage
- Two-phase flow
- Upscaling
Fuente:
scopusTipo de documento:
Article
Estado:
Acceso restringido
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Simulación por computadora
- Ciencia ambiental
- Hidrología
Áreas temáticas de Dewey:
- Ingeniería sanitaria
- Geología, hidrología, meteorología
- Ingeniería química
Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible:
- ODS 14: Vida submarina
- ODS 11: Ciudades y comunidades sostenibles
- ODS 13: Acción por el clima