Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A....

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Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta Geological Survey May 2002

Transcript of Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A....

Page 1: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Geologic Storage of CO2: Leakage Pathways and Environmental RisksMichael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, andStefan Bachu

Princeton University

andAlberta Geological Survey

May 2002

Page 2: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

CO2 Injection and Trapping Mechanisms

Precipitated Carbonate Minerals

~800 mConfining Layer(s)

Injection Well

SupercriticalCO2

Dissolved CO2

Stratigraphic Trapping

Solubility Trapping

Mineral Trapping

Hydrodynamic Trapping

Page 3: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Research Questions

• How effective are the various trapping mechanisms?

• What is the likelihood and magnitude of CO2 leakage?

• What are the environmental impacts of CO2 leakage?

• Today: Solubility trapping

• Today: Abandoned wells

• Today: Mammoth Mtn, and groundwater quality

Page 4: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Simulation of Injection of Supercritical CO2

• TOUGH2 Simulator• Radial symmetry• Isothermal

conditions

• Confining layer permeability of 0.1 mD

• Target formation porosity 10% and permeability of 100 mD.

50 m

10 m

790 m

CO2

Brine

CO2 injection= 20 kg/s

Page 5: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Simulation of Injection of Supercritical CO2

After 4 years of CO2 injection

CO2 injection combined with injection of brine above the confining layer

Radial distance [m]

De

pth

[m

]

Mass of CO2/Volume [kg/m3]

Qbrine = 40 kg/s

Radial distance [m]

De

pth

[m

]

Mass of CO2/Volume [kg/m3]

Page 6: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Simulation of Injection of CO2

Dissolved in Water

• After 1 year • After 50 years

seal

Total Mass CO2 injected = 3.1x107 kg

seal

Total Mass CO2 injected = 1.2x109 kg

Mass of CO2/Volume [kg/m3] Mass of CO2/Volume [kg/m3]

Page 7: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Leakage Pathways and

Trapping Mechanisms

Injected Carbon Dioxide

SurfaceEcosystems

Confining Layer(s)

Atmosphere

lateral migration

Localized vertical migration

fractures,faults, wells

Potable Water

Page 8: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Leakage Pathways:Abandoned Wells in the Alberta Basin

0500100015002000250030003500400045005000

1883

1908

1917

1926

1935

1944

1953

1962

1971

1980

1989

1998

year abandoned

num

ber

of w

ells

Page 9: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Simulation of leakage through a single abandoned well

• Permeability of a typical well cement ~ 10-17 m2

• Permeability of a medium sand ~ 10-10 m2

De

pth

[m

]

Rate of CO2 Leakage [kg/s]

0

1

2

3

4

1.00E-17 1.00E-15 1.00E-13 1.00E-11 1.00E-09

Permeability [m^2]

Page 10: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Potential Effect on GW Quality

-50 50 150 250

distance, m

2 yr.

4 yr.

6 yr.

8 yr.

10 yr.

groundwater flow

CO2 leakage

deep brine aquifer

drinking-water aquifer

0.0E+00

3.0E-08

6.0E-08

9.0E-08

1.2E-07

Pb2

+ co

nce

ntr

atio

n, m

ol/L

Page 11: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

• On the Long Valley Caldera in eastern California

• Soil gas surveys revealed CO2 concentrations as high as 95%. (CO2 concentrations > 10% toxic to humans.)

Mammoth Mountain

Page 12: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Changes in Metal Uptake in Plants

Elevated soil CO2 Ca1989

Zn

Mn

c b

2001

Ambient soil CO2

Mn

Zn

Ca

1989 2001

Page 13: Geologic Storage of CO 2 : Leakage Pathways and Environmental Risks Michael A. Celia, Catherine A. Peters, and Stefan Bachu Princeton University and Alberta.

Acknowledgements

• Funding from BP and Ford.

• Equations of State: R. Bruant

• TOUGH2 Simulations: A. Guswa, S. Gasda

• Leakage Estimates: A. Duguid

• Groundwater Simulations: P. Jaffe, S. Wang

• Mammoth Mountain: S. Myneni, S.J. White