skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Influence of Chemical, Mechanical, and Transport Processes on Wellbore Leakage from Geologic CO2 Storage Reservoirs

Journal Article · · Accounts of Chemical Research
ORCiD logo [1];  [1];  [2]
  1. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California 94550, United States
  2. School of Petroleum Engineering, University of New South Wales, UNSW, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia

Wells are considered to be high-risk pathways for fluid leakage from geologic CO2 storage reservoirs, because breaches in this engineered system have the potential to connect the reservoir to groundwater resources and the atmosphere. Given these concerns, a few studies have assessed leakage risk by evaluating regulatory records, often self-reported, documenting leakage in gas fields. Leakage is thought to be governed largely by initial well-construction quality and the method of well abandonment. The geologic carbon storage community has raised further concerns because acidic fluids in the CO2 storage reservoir, alkaline cement meant to isolate the reservoir fluids from the overlying strata, and steel casings in wells are inherently reactive systems. This is of particular concern for storage of CO2 in depleted oil and gas reservoirs with numerous legacy wells engineered to variable standards. Research suggests that leakage risks are not as great as initially perceived because chemical and mechanical alteration of cement has the capacity to seal damaged zones. Our work centers on defining the coupled chemical and mechanical processes governing flow in damaged zones in wells. We have developed process-based models, constrained by experiments, to better understand and forecast leakage risk. Leakage pathways can be sealed by precipitation of carbonate minerals in the fractures and deformation of the reacted cement. High reactivity of cement hydroxides releases excess calcium that can precipitate as carbonate solids in the fracture network under low brine flow rates. If the flow is fast, then the brine remains undersaturated with respect to the solubility of calcium carbonate minerals, and zones depleted in calcium hydroxides, enriched in calcium carbonate precipitates, and made of amorphous silicates leached of original cement minerals are formed. Under confining pressure, the reacted cement is compressed, which reduces permeability and lowers leakage risks. The broader context of this paper is to use our experimentally calibrated chemical, mechanical, and transport model to illustrate when, where, and in what conditions fracture pathways seal in CO2 storage wells, to reduce their risk to groundwater resources. We do this by defining the amount of cement and the time required to effectively seal the leakage pathways associated with peak and postinjection overpressures, within the context of oil and gas industry standards for leak detection, mitigation, and repairs. Our simulations suggest that for many damage scenarios chemical and mechanical processes lower leakage risk by reducing or sealing fracture pathways. Leakage risk would remain high in wells with a large amount of damage, modeled here as wide fracture apertures, where fast flowing fluids are too dilute for carbonate precipitation and subsurface stress does not compress the altered cement. Fracture sealing is more likely as reservoir pressures decrease during the postinjection phase where lower fluxes aid chemical alteration and mechanical deformation of cement. Our results hold promise for the development of mitigation framework to avoid impacting groundwater resources above any geologic CO2 storage reservoir by correlating operational pressures and barrier lengths.

Research Organization:
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), Livermore, CA (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Fossil Energy (FE)
Grant/Contract Number:
AC52-07NA27344
OSTI ID:
1372505
Alternate ID(s):
OSTI ID: 1415272
Journal Information:
Accounts of Chemical Research, Journal Name: Accounts of Chemical Research; ISSN 0001-4842
Publisher:
American Chemical SocietyCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Citation Metrics:
Cited by: 34 works
Citation information provided by
Web of Science

References (33)

Geochemistry of Wellbore Integrity in CO2 Sequestration: Portland Cement-Steel-Brine-CO2 Interactions journal January 2013
Dynamic alterations in wellbore cement integrity due to geochemical reactions in CO 2 -rich environments : alterations in Wellbore Cement Integrity journal July 2013
Effect of CO 2 -induced reactions on the mechanical behaviour of fractured wellbore cement journal September 2016
Degradation of Well Cement by CO 2 under Geologic Sequestration Conditions journal July 2007
Geochemical effects of CO2 sequestration on fractured wellbore cement at the cement/caprock interface journal July 2009
Wellbore integrity analysis of a natural CO2 producer journal March 2010
Chemical and Mechanical Properties of Wellbore Cement Altered by CO 2 -Rich Brine Using a Multianalytical Approach journal January 2013
Water reactivity in the liquid and supercritical CO2 phase: Has half the story been neglected? journal February 2009
Mechanical and hydraulic coupling in cement–caprock interfaces exposed to carbonated brine journal June 2014
Review of integrity of existing wells in relation to CO2 geological storage: What do we know? journal July 2011
Review: Role of chemistry, mechanics, and transport on well integrity in CO2 storage environments journal June 2016
Incorporating reaction-rate dependence in reaction-front models of wellbore-cement/carbonated-brine systems journal April 2017
Pressure transient testing for assessment of wellbore integrity in the IEAGHG Weyburn–Midale CO2 Monitoring and Storage Project journal June 2013
Kinetics of dolomite–portlandite reaction journal May 2001
Characterization of cement from a well at Teapot Dome Oil Field: Implications for geological sequestration journal January 2011
Evaluation of the Potential for Gas and CO2 Leakage Along Wellbores journal March 2009
CO 2 Reaction with Hydrated Class H Well Cement under Geologic Sequestration Conditions: Effects of Flyash Admixtures journal May 2009
Permeability of Wellbore-Cement Fractures Following Degradation by Carbonated Brine journal December 2012
Well Integrity Assessment of a 68 year old Well at a CO2 Injection Project journal January 2014
Analysis and performance of oil well cement with 30 years of CO2 exposure from the SACROC Unit, West Texas, USA journal April 2007
Degradation of oilwell cement due to exposure to carbonated brine journal May 2010
Experimental Evaluation of Wellbore Integrity Along the Cement-rock Boundary journal June 2012
A solution against well cement degradation under CO2 geological storage environment journal March 2009
Reactive transport of CO2-saturated water in a cement fracture: Application to wellbore leakage during geologic CO2 storage journal January 2016
Experimental Evidence for Self-Limiting Reactive Flow through a Fractured Cement Core: Implications for Time-Dependent Wellbore Leakage journal August 2012
Rate of CO 2 Attack on Hydrated Class H Well Cement under Geologic Sequestration Conditions journal August 2008
Fracture opening or self-sealing: Critical residence time as a unifying parameter for cement–CO2–brine interactions journal April 2016
Fracture-scale model of immiscible fluid flow journal January 2013
Experimental calibration of a numerical model describing the alteration of cement/caprock interfaces by carbonated brine journal March 2014
Identification of Wells With High CO2-Leakage Potential in Mature Oil Fields Developed for CO2-Enhanced Oil Recovery conference April 2013
Reactive transport of CO 2 -rich fluids in simulated wellbore interfaces: Flow-through experiments on the 1–6 m length scale journal November 2016
Brucite [Mg(OH2)] carbonation in wet supercritical CO2: An in situ high pressure X-ray diffraction study journal December 2011
Characterization of the Mechanisms Controlling the Permeability Changes of Fractured Cements Flowed Through by CO 2 -Rich Brine journal September 2013

Figures / Tables (10)


Similar Records

Review: Role of chemistry, mechanics, and transport on well integrity in CO2 storage environments
Journal Article · Wed Jun 01 00:00:00 EDT 2016 · International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control · OSTI ID:1372505

Natural and industrial analogues for release of CO2 from storagereservoirs: Identification of features, events, and processes and lessonslearned
Technical Report · Fri Mar 03 00:00:00 EST 2006 · OSTI ID:1372505

Assessment of two-phase flow on the chemical alteration and sealing of leakage pathways in cemented wellbores
Journal Article · Thu Feb 01 00:00:00 EST 2018 · International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control · OSTI ID:1372505

Related Subjects