An Experimental Investigation of Interaction between CO2 Solution and Rock under Reservoir Conditions in the Jimsar Shale Oil Formation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Experimental Material
2.2. Experimental Apparatus
- (1)
- Corrosion-resistant high-temperature high-pressure reaction vessel (constructed from Hastelloy alloy, inner chamber diameter of 5 cm, depth of 8 cm, volume of 157 cm3, sealed with a fluororubber ring, and maximum working pressure 50 MPa).
- (2)
- D2 phaser diffractometer (with a 2θ rotation angle range of −110° to 168°, readable minimum step size better than 0.002°, angle reproducibility better than 0.002°, capable of conventional and small-angle measurements, and equipped with a scintillation counter and array detector).
- (3)
- Quanta200F field emission environmental Scanning Electron Microscope (resolution 1.2 nm, magnification 25~200 K, featuring high vacuum, low vacuum, and environmental scanning modes).
- (4)
- Pulse decay method gas permeability measurement instrument (utilizing pressure pulse decay method to measure the Kozeny permeability of core samples, measuring range 0.00001~10 mD, short measurement stabilization time, and fast speed), as shown in Figure 1a.
- (5)
- ML-J-2N fully automatic helium porosity meter (measurement accuracy 0.1%, measurement pressure 0.7 MPa), as shown in Figure 1b.
2.3. Experimental Methodology
2.3.1. Rock Sample Pretreatment
2.3.2. Whole Rock and Clay Mineral Analysis Experiment
2.3.3. Electron Microscopy Scanning Experiment
2.3.4. Core Porosity and Permeability Test Experiment
3. Experimental Results and Analysis
3.1. Mineral Composition Analysis
3.2. Pore Throat Microstructure Experiment
3.3. Porosity and Permeability Enhancement Experiment
4. Conclusions
- (1)
- Under Jimsar reservoir conditions, CO2 solution has a relatively strong dissolution capability and generates appreciable variation in the properties of the core samples.
- (2)
- The CO2 solution could dissolve the carbonates when interacting with the reservoir rock. The CO2 solution dissolved the calcite, followed by the dissolution of dolomite. Carbonate contents could be potentially dissolved by sufficient CO2.
- (3)
- From a microscopic perspective, the place of calcium was dissolved and other places were kept unchanged. The typical pore size resulting from the dissolution by CO2 solution ranges from several to dozens of micrometers. Due to rock dissolution, porosity and permeability apparently increased.
- (4)
- For Jimsar shale core samples, the porosity increased by over 20%, and permeability increased approximately twice. Under the Jimsar reservoir condition of 90 °C, the CO2 solution could consume all the carbonates of core samples within 8 days. Porosity and permeability increased fast in the first few days, then leveled off at about 6 days.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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He, H.; Ma, X.; Lei, F.; Liu, X.; Jiang, M.; Li, Y.; Mou, J. An Experimental Investigation of Interaction between CO2 Solution and Rock under Reservoir Conditions in the Jimsar Shale Oil Formation. Processes 2024, 12, 673. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12040673
He H, Ma X, Lei F, Liu X, Jiang M, Li Y, Mou J. An Experimental Investigation of Interaction between CO2 Solution and Rock under Reservoir Conditions in the Jimsar Shale Oil Formation. Processes. 2024; 12(4):673. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12040673
Chicago/Turabian StyleHe, Haibo, Xinfang Ma, Fan Lei, Xinqiu Liu, Ming Jiang, Yue Li, and Jianye Mou. 2024. "An Experimental Investigation of Interaction between CO2 Solution and Rock under Reservoir Conditions in the Jimsar Shale Oil Formation" Processes 12, no. 4: 673. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12040673
APA StyleHe, H., Ma, X., Lei, F., Liu, X., Jiang, M., Li, Y., & Mou, J. (2024). An Experimental Investigation of Interaction between CO2 Solution and Rock under Reservoir Conditions in the Jimsar Shale Oil Formation. Processes, 12(4), 673. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr12040673