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    Investigation of CO2–CH4 Displacement and Transport in Shale for Enhanced Shale Gas Recovery and CO2 Sequestration

    Source: Journal of Energy Resources Technology:;2017:;volume( 139 ):;issue: 001::page 12909
    Author:
    Du, Xi-Dong
    ,
    Gu, Min
    ,
    Duan, Shuo
    ,
    Xian, Xue-Fu
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4035148
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: To gain a better understanding of the enhanced shale gas recovery by CO2 gas injection (CO2-ESGR) technique, the dynamic displacement mechanism of CO2–CH4, the CO2 enhanced shale gas recovery (RCH4), and CO2 storage capacity (VCO2) were studied based on transport properties of CO2 and CH4. Experiments of CO2 injection into shale gas reservoir preadsorbed by CH4 were performed in a fixed bed. Breakthrough curves were obtained under different test conditions and simulated by one-dimension advection-dispersion (AD) model. It was found that dispersion coefficient (K1) rather than molecular diffusivity of CO2 dominated its transport in shale. K1 together with advection velocity (υ) of CO2 during CH4 displacement controls RCH4 and VCO2. When transporting in shale gas reservoir, CO2 had larger dynamic adsorption amount and υ, but smaller K1 than CH4. The competitive transport and adsorption behavior of CO2 and CH4 made it possible for CO2 to store in shale reservoir and to drive the in-place CH4 out of shale reservoir. The transfer zone of CO2–CH4 displacement (CCD) was very wide. High RCH4 and VCO2 were reached at low injection CO2 gas pressure and for small shale particles. Higher injection flow rates of CO2 and temperatures ranging from 298 K to 338 K had a little effect on RCH4 and VCO2. For field conditions, high CO2 injection pressure has to be used because the pore pressure of shale reservoir and adsorption amount of CH4 increase with the increase in depth of shale gas reservoir, but RCH4 is still not high.
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      Investigation of CO2–CH4 Displacement and Transport in Shale for Enhanced Shale Gas Recovery and CO2 Sequestration

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4236891
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    contributor authorDu, Xi-Dong
    contributor authorGu, Min
    contributor authorDuan, Shuo
    contributor authorXian, Xue-Fu
    date accessioned2017-11-25T07:21:07Z
    date available2017-11-25T07:21:07Z
    date copyright2016/29/11
    date issued2017
    identifier issn0195-0738
    identifier otherjert_139_01_012909.pdf
    identifier urihttp://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4236891
    description abstractTo gain a better understanding of the enhanced shale gas recovery by CO2 gas injection (CO2-ESGR) technique, the dynamic displacement mechanism of CO2–CH4, the CO2 enhanced shale gas recovery (RCH4), and CO2 storage capacity (VCO2) were studied based on transport properties of CO2 and CH4. Experiments of CO2 injection into shale gas reservoir preadsorbed by CH4 were performed in a fixed bed. Breakthrough curves were obtained under different test conditions and simulated by one-dimension advection-dispersion (AD) model. It was found that dispersion coefficient (K1) rather than molecular diffusivity of CO2 dominated its transport in shale. K1 together with advection velocity (υ) of CO2 during CH4 displacement controls RCH4 and VCO2. When transporting in shale gas reservoir, CO2 had larger dynamic adsorption amount and υ, but smaller K1 than CH4. The competitive transport and adsorption behavior of CO2 and CH4 made it possible for CO2 to store in shale reservoir and to drive the in-place CH4 out of shale reservoir. The transfer zone of CO2–CH4 displacement (CCD) was very wide. High RCH4 and VCO2 were reached at low injection CO2 gas pressure and for small shale particles. Higher injection flow rates of CO2 and temperatures ranging from 298 K to 338 K had a little effect on RCH4 and VCO2. For field conditions, high CO2 injection pressure has to be used because the pore pressure of shale reservoir and adsorption amount of CH4 increase with the increase in depth of shale gas reservoir, but RCH4 is still not high.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleInvestigation of CO2–CH4 Displacement and Transport in Shale for Enhanced Shale Gas Recovery and CO2 Sequestration
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume139
    journal issue1
    journal titleJournal of Energy Resources Technology
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4035148
    journal fristpage12909
    journal lastpage012909-9
    treeJournal of Energy Resources Technology:;2017:;volume( 139 ):;issue: 001
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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