Affiliation:
1. Northeast Petroleum University
2. Clausthal University of Technology
Abstract
Summary
A safe and ecologic underground storage of carbon dioxide (CO2) requires long-term integrity of the wells affected by the injected CO2, including both active wells and abandoned wells. In line with other investigators, technical integrity is assumed if there is no significant leak in the subsurface system from the storage reservoir. The evaluation of integrity of abandoned wells over a long time frame during CO2 underground storage can only be performed indirectly and requires a comprehensive understanding of relevant thermal/hydraulic/mechanical/chemical processes affecting well integrity. This paper presents an integrated approach coupling qualitative features, events, and processes (FEPs) and scenario analysis with quantitative-model development and consequence analysis. The qualitative analysis provides a solid and comprehensive study on all the FEPs that affect well integrity. The mechanical model presents the stress distribution of the casing/cement/rock composite system and provides a quantification of the defect dimension caused by different load conditions. The defect dimension can be used to compute equivalent permeability of the cement sheath by use of empirical correlations, which is an important input parameter for the following CO2-leakage simulation, provided it is considered that CO2 can only migrate through the defects instead of the cement matrix. When integrity is compromised, the storage reservoir will leak CO2. For this leakage, a numerical model is presented to simulate the flow of CO2 along abandoned wellbores during the storage period, such as 1,000 years. It is found from the FEP analysis that the most-critical system components are caprock, casing/cement/rock composite system, and abandonment elements. By building a geomechanical model and a leakage model, it is also found that in the simulated scenarios the CO2-leakage rate is very small except for when using cement sheaths of very poor quality, which can lead to a leakage rate exceeding the maximum-allowable value. The sensitivity analysis shows that the vertical permeability of the cement sheath plays the most critical role. In comparison with previous studies, this method is comprehensive and easy to implement.
Publisher
Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)
Subject
Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology,Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Cited by
22 articles.
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