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Journal ArticleDOI

A Fully Coupled Multiphase Multicomponent Flow and Geomechanics Model for Enhanced Coalbed-Methane Recovery and CO2 Storage

Zhijie Wei, +1 more
- 08 Apr 2013 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 03, pp 448-467
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TLDR
In this paper, a fully coupled multiphase multicomponent flow and geomechanics model is developed for coalbed-methane (CBM) recovery by the injection of CO2 and/or N2.
Abstract
Enhanced coalbed-methane (ECBM) recovery by the injection of CO2 and/or N2 is an attractive method for recovering additional natural gas resources, while at the same time sequestering CO2 in the subsurface. For the naturally fractured coalbed-methane (CBM) reservoirs, the coupled fluid-flow and geomechanics effects involving both the effective-stress effect and the matrix shrinkage/swelling, are crucial to simulate the permeability change and; thus gas migration during primary or enhanced CBM recovery. In this work, a fully coupled multiphase multicomponent flow and geomechanics model is developed. The coupling effects are modeled by introducing a set of elaborate geomechanical equations, which can provide more fundamental understanding about the solid deformation and give a more accurate permeability/ porosity prediction over the existing analytical models. In addition, the fluid-flow model in our study is fully compositional; considering both multicomponent gas dissolution and water volatility. To obtain accurate gas solubility in the aqueous phase, the PengRobinson equation of state (EOS) is modified according to the suggestions of Soreide and Whitson (1992). An extended Langmuir isotherm is used to describe the adsorption/desorption behavior of the multicomponent gas to/from the coal surface. With a fully implicit finite-difference method, we develop: a 3D, multiphase, multicomponent, dual-porosity CBM/ECBM research code that is fully compositional and has fully coupled fluid flow and geomechanics. It has been partially validated and verified by comparison against other simulators such as GEM, Eclipse, and Coalgas. We then perform a series of simulations/investigations with our research code. First, history matching of Alberta flue-gas-injection micropilot data is performed to test the permeability model. The commonly used uniaxial-strain and constant-overburden-stress assumptions for analytical permeability models are then assessed. Finally, the coupling effects of fluid flow and geomechanics are investigated, and the impact of different mixed CO2/N2 injection scenarios is explored for both methane (CH4) production and CO2 sequestration.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fully coupled two-phase flow and poromechanics modeling of coalbed methane recovery: Impact of geomechanics on production rate

TL;DR: In this article, a fully coupled two-phase flow, transport, and poromechanics numerical model for the analysis of geomechanical impacts on coalbed methane (CBM) production is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

A multi-continuum multiple flow mechanism simulator for unconventional oil and gas recovery

TL;DR: The UNConventional Oil and Gas simulator (UNCONG) as discussed by the authors is based on the black oil model and the compositional model, and it can handle unconventional oil and gas problems more properly.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predicting the phase behavior of hydrogen in NaCl brines by molecular simulation for geological applications

TL;DR: In this paper, Monte Carlo simulations have been carried out to generate new simulated data of hydrogen solubility in aqueous NaCl solutions in temperature and salinity ranges of interest for geological applications, and for which no experimental data are currently available.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Multicomponent, Two-Phase-Flow Model for CO2 Storage and Enhanced Coalbed-Methane Recovery

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the simultaneous flow of water and gas containing multiple adsorbing components and provided analytical solutions for two-phase, three-and four-component flow with volume change on mixing in adsorbed systems.

Measurement of stress-dependent permeability in coal and its influence on coalbed methane production

R. Puri, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented laboratory-measured coal permeability reduction during reservoir pressure depletion using a whole-core sample of coal in uniaxial strain at reservoir conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of coal seam as interlayer on CO2 storage in saline aquifers: A reservoir simulation study

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of coal seams on CO2 storage and migration behavior by providing extra storage capacity and influencing the CO2 flow path both vertically and horizontally.

Two-Dimensional Equation-of-State Modeling of Adsorption of Coalbed Methane Gases

TL;DR: In this paper, a 2D Peng-Robinson (PR) Equation of State (EOS) model was used to predict pure-gas adsorption on carbon matrices at supercritical and near-critical conditions.
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