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Article Dans Une Revue Environmental Science and Technology Année : 2013

Characterization of the Mechanisms Controlling the Permeability Changes of Fractured Cements Flowed Through by CO2-Rich Brine

Halidi Abdoulghafour
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Linda Luquot
Philippe Gouze
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Résumé

Experiments were conducted to assess the potential impact of fractured well-cement degradation on leakage rate. Permeability was monitored while CO2-enriched reservoir-equilibrated brine was flowed at constant rate through a single fracture in a class G cement core under conditions mimicking geologic sequestration environments (temperature 60 °C, pressure 10 MPa). The results demonstrate that, at least for the conditions used in the experiment, an initial leakage in a 42 μm aperture fracture (permeability = 1.5 × 10-10 m2) can be self-mitigated due to the decrease of the fracture hydraulic aperture after about 15 h. This decrease results from the development of continuous highly hydrated amorphous Si-rich alteration products at the edge of the fracture and the dense carbonation of the bulk cement that mitigate the penetration of the alteration front.
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Dates et versions

hal-00950088 , version 1 (20-02-2014)

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Citer

Halidi Abdoulghafour, Linda Luquot, Philippe Gouze. Characterization of the Mechanisms Controlling the Permeability Changes of Fractured Cements Flowed Through by CO2-Rich Brine. Environmental Science and Technology, 2013, 47 (18), pp.10332-10338. ⟨10.1021/es401317c⟩. ⟨hal-00950088⟩
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