4.7 Article

Effect of CO2-brine-rock interaction on fracture mechanical properties of CO2 reservoirs and seals

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 499, Issue -, Pages 37-47

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2018.07.013

Keywords

CO2 sequestration; fracture; fracture mechanics; diagenesis; natural CO2 analog; Crystal Geyser

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0001114]
  2. Jackson School of Geosciences at The University of Texas at Austin
  3. U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration [DE-NA-0003525]

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The effect of CO2-water-rock interactions on fracture mechanical properties of reservoir and seal rocks due to injection of CO2 in the subsurface may impact long-term (10(2)-10(4) yr) storage security. At the Crystal Geyser and Salt Wash field sites near Green River, Utah, sandstone of the Salt Wash Member of the Morrison Formation and Mancos Shale have undergone chemical alteration associated with flow of CO2-bearing water under natural conditions over geologic time scales of 10(3)-10(5) yrs. To quantify the effects of these diagenetic changes on rock fracture mechanical properties we conducted opening mode fracture mechanics tests using the double torsion method on a suite of CO2-altered and unaltered siliciclastic samples. We show that dissolution of hematite and carbonate cement in Entrada Sandstone by CO2-rich brine lowers fracture toughness by nearly 40% relative to adjacent, unaltered samples from the same unit. In contrast, precipitation of calcite pore cement in a sandstone of the Salt Wash Member of the Morrison Formation, attributed to CO2 degassing during upward fluid flow along the Little Grand Wash Fault, results in a 100-700% increase in fracture toughness. Similarly, precipitation of carbonate mineral cements and replacement of matrix measurably strengthens Mancos Shale, considered a regional top seal. Subcritical fracture growth index (SCI) which quantifies reaction-assisted subcritical fracture propagation is also affected by CO2-related alteration. Based on previous numerical simulations of fracture network growth with varying fracture mechanical parameters, we find that the measured variations in fracture mechanical properties qualitatively match observed differences in opening-mode fracture distributions along the fault, with short, non-connected fractures in CO2-bleached rock, long, throughgoing fractures in calcite-cemented shale, and short, closely spaced, interconnected fracture networks in highly altered rock directly adjacent to fault conduits. Our fracture mechanics tests demonstrate that fracture mechanical properties of reservoir and seal rock can change as a result of chemical CO2-brine-rock interaction. These chemical interactions may favor or inhibit subcritical fracture growth processes and thus reservoir and seal flow properties. In regions of CO2-related mineral dissolution, subcritical fracture growth may reduce seal integrity over time scales beyond those of active injection and reservoir monitoring, thus negatively affecting seal integrity over the expected design lifetime of a CO2 reservoir. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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