Evaluation of reservoir and cap-rock integrity for the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot based on laboratory experiments and injection tests

Mechanical laboratory testing and interpretation of injection tests of the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot are used to evaluate geomechanical conditions for safe CO2 storage. The laboratory testing program includes compressive and tensile strength tests of overburden and reservoir core samples, and t...

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Main Authors: Bohloli, Bahman, Skurtveit, Elin, Grande, Lars, Titlestad, Geir Ove, Børresen, Marion, Johnsen, Øistein, Braathen, Alvar
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2375329
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spelling ftngicom:oai:brage.bibsys.no:11250/2375329 2023-05-15T17:08:28+02:00 Evaluation of reservoir and cap-rock integrity for the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot based on laboratory experiments and injection tests Bohloli, Bahman Skurtveit, Elin Grande, Lars Titlestad, Geir Ove Børresen, Marion Johnsen, Øistein Braathen, Alvar 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2375329 eng eng http://www.geologi.no/images/njg/2014-2019/2014/2-3/NJG_2_3_Vol94_Bohloli_Pr2.pdf Norges forskningsråd: 200006 Norges forskningsråd: 193825 Norsk Geologisk Tidsskrift 2014, 94(2-3):171-187 urn:issn:1502-5322 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2375329 cristin:1200445 Journal article 2014 ftngicom 2018-09-20T09:19:47Z Mechanical laboratory testing and interpretation of injection tests of the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot are used to evaluate geomechanical conditions for safe CO2 storage. The laboratory testing program includes compressive and tensile strength tests of overburden and reservoir core samples, and the injection program consists of various types of injection tests at different depths from the shallow aquifer down to the targeted sandstone reservoir. Water injection tests (leak-off, step rate and fracture tests) were analysed to determine fracture pressure for cap-rock and reservoir formations, and fracture closure pressure for some intervals. In addition, laboratory tests, well-log data and empirical correlations were used to analyse compressive and tensile strength vs. depth. Laboratory tests showed that despite the shallow depth of the reservoir, less than 700 m, the strength and stiffness of intact material is very high, and that there is significant strength anisotropy in the shale units. The high tensile strength of intact formations in combination with the presence of pre-existing fractures makes fracturing of the intact intervals very unlikely. Interpretation of the injection tests indicates that fracture pressure has a higher magnitude and gradient in the overburden than in the reservoir. In the overburden, fracture closure stress representing the minor horizontal stress is slightly lower than the vertical stress. Fracture pressure in the reservoir interval is significantly less than the vertical stress, which suggests horizontal stress to be the minimum principal stress. Therefore, opening of pre-existing vertical to subvertical fractures is considered the most likely fracturing mode in the reservoir, whereas in the overburden it is uncertain due to the marginal difference between vertical and horizontal stresses. Article in Journal/Newspaper Longyearbyen Unknown Longyearbyen
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftngicom
language English
description Mechanical laboratory testing and interpretation of injection tests of the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot are used to evaluate geomechanical conditions for safe CO2 storage. The laboratory testing program includes compressive and tensile strength tests of overburden and reservoir core samples, and the injection program consists of various types of injection tests at different depths from the shallow aquifer down to the targeted sandstone reservoir. Water injection tests (leak-off, step rate and fracture tests) were analysed to determine fracture pressure for cap-rock and reservoir formations, and fracture closure pressure for some intervals. In addition, laboratory tests, well-log data and empirical correlations were used to analyse compressive and tensile strength vs. depth. Laboratory tests showed that despite the shallow depth of the reservoir, less than 700 m, the strength and stiffness of intact material is very high, and that there is significant strength anisotropy in the shale units. The high tensile strength of intact formations in combination with the presence of pre-existing fractures makes fracturing of the intact intervals very unlikely. Interpretation of the injection tests indicates that fracture pressure has a higher magnitude and gradient in the overburden than in the reservoir. In the overburden, fracture closure stress representing the minor horizontal stress is slightly lower than the vertical stress. Fracture pressure in the reservoir interval is significantly less than the vertical stress, which suggests horizontal stress to be the minimum principal stress. Therefore, opening of pre-existing vertical to subvertical fractures is considered the most likely fracturing mode in the reservoir, whereas in the overburden it is uncertain due to the marginal difference between vertical and horizontal stresses.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bohloli, Bahman
Skurtveit, Elin
Grande, Lars
Titlestad, Geir Ove
Børresen, Marion
Johnsen, Øistein
Braathen, Alvar
spellingShingle Bohloli, Bahman
Skurtveit, Elin
Grande, Lars
Titlestad, Geir Ove
Børresen, Marion
Johnsen, Øistein
Braathen, Alvar
Evaluation of reservoir and cap-rock integrity for the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot based on laboratory experiments and injection tests
author_facet Bohloli, Bahman
Skurtveit, Elin
Grande, Lars
Titlestad, Geir Ove
Børresen, Marion
Johnsen, Øistein
Braathen, Alvar
author_sort Bohloli, Bahman
title Evaluation of reservoir and cap-rock integrity for the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot based on laboratory experiments and injection tests
title_short Evaluation of reservoir and cap-rock integrity for the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot based on laboratory experiments and injection tests
title_full Evaluation of reservoir and cap-rock integrity for the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot based on laboratory experiments and injection tests
title_fullStr Evaluation of reservoir and cap-rock integrity for the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot based on laboratory experiments and injection tests
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of reservoir and cap-rock integrity for the Longyearbyen CO2 storage pilot based on laboratory experiments and injection tests
title_sort evaluation of reservoir and cap-rock integrity for the longyearbyen co2 storage pilot based on laboratory experiments and injection tests
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2375329
geographic Longyearbyen
geographic_facet Longyearbyen
genre Longyearbyen
genre_facet Longyearbyen
op_relation http://www.geologi.no/images/njg/2014-2019/2014/2-3/NJG_2_3_Vol94_Bohloli_Pr2.pdf
Norges forskningsråd: 200006
Norges forskningsråd: 193825
Norsk Geologisk Tidsskrift 2014, 94(2-3):171-187
urn:issn:1502-5322
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2375329
cristin:1200445
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