CO2 wettability of caprocks: Implications for structural storage capacity and containment security

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Abstract

Structural trapping, the most important CO2 geostorage mechanism during the first decades of a sequestration project, hinges on the traditional assumption that the caprock is strongly water wet. However, this assumption has not yet been verified; and it is indeed not generally true as we demonstrate here. Instead, caprock can be weakly water wet or intermediate wet at typical storage conditions; and water wettability decreases with increasing pressure or temperature. Consequently, a lower storage capacity can be inferred for structural trapping in such cases.

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APA

Iglauer, S., Al-Yaseri, A. Z., Rezaee, R., & Lebedev, M. (2015). CO2 wettability of caprocks: Implications for structural storage capacity and containment security. Geophysical Research Letters, 42(21), 9279–9284. https://doi.org/10.1002/2015GL065787

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