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Abstract (EDOC: 18754)
Injection of CO2 into gas reservoirs for CO2-
enhanced gas recovery will initiate a series of geochemical
reactions between pore fluids and solid phases. To simulate
these conditions, the coupled multiphase flow and multicomponent
reactive transport simulator OpenGeoSys-
ChemApp was extended to take into account the kinetic
nature of fluid/mineral reactions. The coupled simulator is
verified successfully for the correctness and accuracy of the
implemented kinetic reactions using benchmark simulations.
Based on a representative geochemical model
developed for the Altensalzwedel compartment of the
Altmark gas field in northeastern Germany (De Lucia et al.
this issue), the code is applied to study reactive transport
following an injection of CO2, including dissolution and
precipitation kinetics of mineral reactions and the resulting
porosity changes. Results from batch simulations show that
injection-induced kinetic reactions proceed for more than
10,000 years. Relevant reactions predicted by the model
comprise the dissolution of illite, precipitation of secondary
clays, kaolinite and montmorillonite, and the mineral
trapping of CO2 as calcite, which starts precipitating in
notable quantities after approximately 2,000 years. At
earlier times, the model predicts only small changes in the
mineral composition and aqueous component concentrations.
Monitoring by brine sampling during the injection or
early post-injection period therefore would probably not be
indicative of the geochemical trapping mechanisms. Onedimensional
simulations of CO2 diffusing into stagnant
brine show only a small influence of the transport of dissolved
components at early times. Therefore, in the long
term, the system can be approximated reasonably well by
kinetic batch modelling.
(2012): Modelling CO2-induced fluid-rock interactions in the Altensalzwedel gas reservoir. Part II: coupled reactive transport simulation. Environmental Earth Sciences, 67, 2, 573-588.
(2012): Modelling CO2-induced fluid-rock interactions in the Altensalzwedel gas reservoir. Part II: coupled reactive transport simulation. Environmental Earth Sciences, 67, 2, 573-588.

