Microseismic Monitoring Technology Developments and Prospects in CCUS Injection Engineering
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Microseismic Monitoring Technology in CCUS Engineering
2.1. Microseismic Event Triggering Mechanisms in Carbon Storage Engineering
- 1.
- The evolution of the pore pressure or the effect of the nature of the injected fluid on the stability of fractures or faults: Once CO2 is injected into the target formation, whether during storage, replacement, or substitution, it will increase the pore pressure of the formation and change the original formation stability [10]. If the target formation is fractured or has small faults and fracture zones that are conducive to sequestration and replacement, the pore pressure of the target reservoir will be more susceptible to the influence of the injected fluids and disrupt the original stress equilibrium [11].
- 2.
- Non-isothermal effect: This effect usually occurs when the injected fluid reaches the injected formation at a lower temperature than the rock temperature, resulting in rock contraction, thermal stress reduction, and stress redistribution around the cooling zone. The injected CO2 is usually at a lower temperature than the surrounding rock, due to the fact that the CO2 has not yet reached thermal equilibrium with the ground temperature gradient during injection [12]. Therefore, reservoir cooling around the injected wells and lower thermal stresses can cause the stress field to approach an unstable state [13,14].
- 3.
- Presence of low-permeability faults: The presence of low-permeability faults in injected formations causes local stress distribution inequalities, reducing the stability of the injected formation and potentially leading to fault reactivation. Each (micro)seismic event induces stress redistribution around a fracture or fault that experiences shear slip [15,16].
- 4.
- 5.
- Geochemical effects (may be particularly relevant to carbonate formation): Geochemical reactions can change the frictional strength of faults, which can lead to local changes around faults when they are damaged [19], thus affecting the fault stability.
2.2. The Importance of Microseismic Monitoring Implementation
3. Case Study of CCUS Microseismic Monitoring Engineering
3.1. Long-Term CO2 Storage Monitoring in the Weyburn Field, Canada
3.2. CO2 Geological Storage Project in the Sleipner Field, Norway
3.3. CO2 Storage Project in In Salah, Algeria
3.4. CO2 Injection Monitoring Project in the Pembina Field, Alberta, Canada
3.5. CO2 Injection Monitoring Project in the Illinois Basin, USA
3.6. Microseismic Monitoring of CO2 Injection Projects in Other Regions
4. Case Study of Carbon Sequestration Injection and Microseismic Monitoring Engineering in China
4.1. CCUS-EOR Project in Jilin
4.2. CCUS-ECBM Project in Shanxi, China
4.3. CCUS-EOR Project in Shaanxi, China
5. Discussion and Prospects
5.1. Data Processing and Interpretation of CCUS Engineering Microseismic Monitoring
5.2. Effectiveness and Safety Evaluation of Microseismic Monitoring in CCUS Projects
5.3. Selection and Integration of CCUS Engineering Geophysical Techniques
6. Conclusions
- 1.
- The microseismic monitoring results of CCUS engineering need to analyze the magnitude, mechanism, spatial and temporal frequency, and distribution of events to accurately reflect the geomechanical changes in injected reservoirs. In China’s projects, passive ambient noise imaging results can also better reflect the plume results. The relationship between the space–time law of the event distribution and the strength of the cap rock can effectively identify the breakthrough or even leakage behavior of CO2. The distribution of microseismic energy release can show the dynamic behavior of fluid in the reservoir.
- 2.
- CCUS project needs to establish a reliable process of CO2 geological and geophysical injection analysis. The CCUS engineering microseismic monitoring technology can monitor (micro-)earthquakes that inject into the front edge or induce fault activation. It is necessary to combine the numerical simulation of reservoir fluid and rock physics modeling, and the numerical simulation of microseismic wave fields to form an important process in CO2 geological storage analysis. To achieve this, a direct means is to evaluate and analyze the plume distribution and reservoir geomechanical changes formed by CO2 injection.
- 3.
- China’s CO2 injection monitoring has achieved good results thanks to a comprehensive monitoring strategy. CO2 geological storage monitoring is in the stage of testing and evaluation in China. Through two projects with obvious differences, a set of well–ground joint multi-array microseismic monitoring systems with high applicability and strong practicability are proposed, which are combined with artificial intelligence integration, and data processing and interpretation platforms. In future engineering work, it is necessary to further optimize and mature the technology and specifications. With the progress in optical fiber technology, the development of cost-controllable and permanent acquisition equipment will enable microseismic monitoring to meet the requirements of a certain period of repeated or continuous observations, and intelligently assess risks and deal with early warnings.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Project | Total Injection Volume | Injection Pressure | Duration | Reservoir Type | Porosity and Permeability | Microseismic Monitoring Results | Event Mechanism | Observation System |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Weyburn Oilfield, Canada | 18 mt | 20+ MPa | 2000–2010 | Fractured carbonate reservoir | 15–26%, 10–20 mD | 200 | Injection center fracture activation, stress diffusion | Single borehole array |
Sleipner, Norway | 13 mt | 6.4 MPa | 1996–2011 | Water-bearing sandstone reservoir | 35–40%, >1 D | / | / | / |
In Salah, Algeria | 3.8 mt | 25 MPa | 2004–2011 | Water-bearing sandstone reservoir | 10–17%, ~10 mD | 700 | Shear activation of fault zone | Single borehole array |
Pembina Oilfield, Alberta, Canada | / | / | 2005–2008 | Sandstone reservoir | 14.8–16.4%, ~9.5 mD | / | / | Single borehole array |
Illinois Basin–Decatur Project (IBDP) | 1 mt | / | 2011–2014 | Sandstone reservoir | 10–30%, high permeability | 4000+ | Fracture shear activation | Two independent single borehole arrays |
Bass Island Dolomite (BILD) | 0.01 mt | 8.5 MPa | 2006–2009 | Dolomite reservoir | ~13%, ~22 mD | 200 | Oscillation caused by fluid phase transition near wellbore | Single borehole array |
Jilin, China | 0.2 mt | 11–14 MPa | 2008–2014 | Sandstone reservoir | ~12.7%, ~3.5 mD | some energy disturbances | Fluid injection into production dynamics | Surface array |
Shanxi, China | 0.02 mt | 13 MPa | 2018–2021 | Coalbed methane reservoir | 3.65–5.96%, 0.01–1.10 mD | 38 | Depict fluid production path | Multiple arrays of borehole-ground joint geophones |
Shaanxi, China | 0.03 mt | 15 MPa | 2018–2021 | Tight sandstone reservoir | ~10%, ~1 mD | 28 | Internal activation of injection layer | Dense array of borehole-ground joint geophones |
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Meng, L.; Zheng, J.; Yang, R.; Peng, S.; Sun, Y.; Xie, J.; Li, D. Microseismic Monitoring Technology Developments and Prospects in CCUS Injection Engineering. Energies 2023, 16, 3101. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16073101
Meng L, Zheng J, Yang R, Peng S, Sun Y, Xie J, Li D. Microseismic Monitoring Technology Developments and Prospects in CCUS Injection Engineering. Energies. 2023; 16(7):3101. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16073101
Chicago/Turabian StyleMeng, Lingbin, Jing Zheng, Ruizhao Yang, Suping Peng, Yuan Sun, Jingyu Xie, and Dewei Li. 2023. "Microseismic Monitoring Technology Developments and Prospects in CCUS Injection Engineering" Energies 16, no. 7: 3101. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16073101
APA StyleMeng, L., Zheng, J., Yang, R., Peng, S., Sun, Y., Xie, J., & Li, D. (2023). Microseismic Monitoring Technology Developments and Prospects in CCUS Injection Engineering. Energies, 16(7), 3101. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16073101