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Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling Laboratory Permeability in Coal Using Sorption-Induced Strain Data

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TLDR
Sorption-induced strain and permeability were measured as a function of pore pressure using subbituminous coal from the Powder River basin of Wyoming, USA, and high-volatile bituminous coals from the Uinta-Piceance basin of Utah, USA as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
Sorption-induced strain and permeability were measured as a function of pore pressure using subbituminous coal from the Powder River basin of Wyoming, USA, and high-volatile bituminous coal from the Uinta-Piceance basin of Utah, USA. We found that for these coal samples, cleat compressibility was not constant, but variable. Calculated variable cleat-compressibility constants were found to correlate well with previously published data for other coals. Sorption-induced matrix strain (shrinkage/swelling) was measured on unconstrained samples for different gases: carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and nitrogen (N2). During permeability tests, sorption-induced matrix shrinkage was demonstrated clearly by higher-permeability values at lower pore pressures while holding overburden pressure constant; this effect was more pronounced when gases with higher adsorption isotherms such as CO2 were used. Measured permeability data were modeled using three different permeability models that take into account sorption-induced matrix strain. We found that when the measured strain data were applied, all three models matched the measured permeability results poorly. However, by applying an experimentally derived expression to the strain data that accounts for the constraining stress of overburden pressure, pore pressure, coal type, and gas type, two of the models were greatly improved.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling permeability for coal reservoirs: A review of analytical models and testing data

TL;DR: A review of coal permeability and the approaches to modelling its behavior can be found in this paper, where the authors identify some potential areas for future work, as well as some potential directions for future research.
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Impact of matrix–fracture interactions on coal permeability: Model development and analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a new coal seam permeability model that incorporates the matrix-fracture interactions and introduced a newly defined internal swelling coefficient (f) to quantify the contribution of adsorption-induced matrix deformation to fracture aperture and coal permeability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of coal permeability from stress-controlled to displacement-controlled swelling conditions

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple free expansion plus push back approach is developed to determine the magnitude of this stress and its effect on coal permeability evolution, which can be used to explain stress-controlled experimental observations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of the effective stress coefficient and sorption-induced strain on the evolution of coal permeability: Experimental observations

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of experiments have been conducted for coal samples using both non-adsorbing and adsorbing gases at various confining stresses and pore pressures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linking gas-sorption induced changes in coal permeability to directional strains through a modulus reduction ratio

TL;DR: In this article, a model is developed to define the evolution of gas sorption-induced coal permeability anisotropy under the full spectrum of mechanical conditions spanning prescribed in-situ stresses through constrained displacement.
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