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  • TU Distinguished Lecturer Series: Jie Wang

TU Distinguished Lecturer Series: Jie Wang

  • 17 Apr 2024
  • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
  • University of Tulsa Keplinger Hall 3005

The University of Tulsa and the Tulsa Chapter of the Society of Petrophysicists and Well Log Analysts (SPWLA) Announce:

Salinity Effect on CO2 Solubility in Live Formation Water Under Reservoir Conditions

Jie Wang 2023-2024 SPWLA Distinguished Lecturer

Wednesday April 17, 2024 | 12:00 – 1:00 | Keplinger Hall 3005

Box-lunches provided (@ no cost) for pre-registered guests.. Register by email to: tulsa.chapter@spwla.org

DEADLINE TO REGISTER FOR BOX LUNCH: April 15, 2024


Dissolution of CO2 in saline waters is considered one of three main CO2 trapping mechanisms, along with structural/stratigraphic trapping and mineralization. CO2 can dissolve in fresh/saline water under typical reservoir pressure and temperatures with solubility dependent on pressure, temperature, and salinity. The typical assumption in open literatures regarding CO2 solubility studies—that saline water or fresh water is considered as a liquid without any pre-dissolved gases under pressures and temperatures—is not true because any formation water contains appreciable dissolved gases for all pressure and temperature conditions. An example of gas-water ratio (GWR) can be ~1 scf/stb for a saline aquifer and ~5 to 6 scf/stb for formation water in an oil reservoir. The first set of experiments evaluated the CO2 solubility in live formation water. The second set of experiments evaluated how variation in the live brine salinity affected CO2 solubility. These experiments involved a synthesis of the brine with three different salinities (low, medium, and high), recombination of live formation water, CO2 addition in a high-pressure and high-temperature pressure-volume-temperature (PVT) visual cell, and determination of bubble-point pressure within the PVT cell. The results showed that CO2 solubility in live formation water is significantly less than that in “dead” water under reservoir conditions. The CO2 solubility vs. pressure curve has a much steeper slope, which indicates that CO2 can no longer be dissolved in the live brine once it reaches a certain solubility. In addition, the brine salinity affects CO2 solubility in live formation water by further reducing CO2 solubility with increasing live brine salinity. Understanding CO2 dissolution in live saline water is essential for future carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) evaluation and execution.

SPEAKER INFO:

Jie Wang joined Intertek Westport Technology Center in March 2021 as a senior

reservoir engineer. She is currently a PhD candidate in petroleum engineering with

University of Houston. Jie has worked in oil & gas industry for more than 25 years

focusing on reservoir engineering, including reservoir fluid characterization (PVT test

and EOS modeling), special core analysis (SCAL test and numerical analysis),

reservoir simulation, as well as enhanced oil recovery (EOR) for both laboratory EOR

test evaluation and subsequent reservoir simulation studies.



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