BGR Bundesanstalt für Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe

Storage Processes

Injection of CO2 and associated substances into a storage formation disturbs physical and chemical conditions in the subsurface resulting in disequilibria leading to thermal, fluid-dynamic, mechanical and chemical reactions. Some of these reactions are of geotechnical relevance, e.g. impacting injectivity, storage capacity, and security.

In order to identify and predict processes of geotechnical relevance, scientists and engineers of BGR

  • examine rocks from the vicinity of natural CO2 sources,
  • calculate states, processes and reactions through computer simulations,
  • carry out laboratory experiments under controlled conditions.

To predict the conditions in industrial size storage projects, it is necessary to combine all three approaches, each of which sheds light on different aspects and dimensions of processes. Additionally, processes are coupled, e.g. chemical and fluid-dynamical processes.

Original (red) and geochemically altered (grey) Buntsandstein from a drill coreOriginal (red) and geochemically altered (grey) Buntsandstein from a drill core Source: BGR

When CO2 meets water in the subsurface, it is dissolved to form carbonic acid. Carbonic acid can react with the surrounding rock and in turn dissolve mineral components. This is how natural sparkling mineral waters form. The reactions can also cause new minerals to form. Because the rocks thus altered have different physical properties compared to the original rock, it is important to predict the impact of CO2 on the reservoir and cap rocks. For example, an increase of porosity due to chemical reactions within the reservoir rock might increase the storage capacity, while an increase of porosity in the cap rock could be a risk to the safe confinement of the stored CO2.






Current Projects:

  • CLUSTER Impacts of impurities in captured CO2 streams from different emitters of a local cluster on transport, injection and storage

Past Projects:

  • CASTOR European CASTOR project on the capture and geological storage of CO2
  • CLEAN CO2 Large-Scale Enhanced Gas Recovery in the Altmark Natural Gas Field
  • GESTCO Geological Storage of CO2 from Fossil Fuel Combustion
  • DYNAMIS Towards Hydrogen Production with CO2 Management
  • Einfluss struktureller Heterogenitäten auf die Speicherkapzität von Kohlendioxid in Aquiferporenspeichern
  • Regionale Druckauswirkung der CO2-Speicherung in salinaren Aquiferen
  • CO2GEONET European Network of Excellence on Geological Storage of CO2
  • CSEGR Carbon Sequestration with Enhanced Gas Recovery
  • CO2Brim Mehrstufige und regionale Charakterisierung potenzieller CO2-Speicherformationen unter besonderer Berücksichtigung von Soleaufstiegsrisiken
  • CO2BioPerm Einfluss biogeochemischer CO2-Transformationsprozesse auf das langzeitige Permeabilitätsverhalten von Speicher- und Deckgesteinen sowie Bohrlochzementen
  • COORAL CO2 Purity for Capture and Storage
  • CO2QUEST Techno-economic Assessment of CO2 Quality Effect on its Storage and Transport
  • ULTimateCO2 Understanding the long-term fate of geologically stored CO2

Contact 1:

    
Dr. Franz May
Phone: +49 (0)511-643-3784

Contact 2:

    
Dr. Gabriela von Goerne
Phone: +49-(0)511-643-3101

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