November 2, 2013
Journal Article

A Finite Element Model for Simulation of Carbon Dioxide Sequestration

Abstract

We present a hydro-mechanical model, followed by stress, deformation, and shear-slip failure analysis for geological sequestration of carbon dioxide (CO2). The model considers the poroelastic effects by taking into account of the two-way coupling between the geomechanical response and the fluid flow process. Analytical solutions for pressure and deformation fields were derived for a typical geological sequestration scenario in our previous work. A finite element approach is introduced here for numerically solving the hydro-mechanical model with arbitrary boundary conditions. The numerical approach was built on an open-source finite element code Elmer, and results were compared to the analytical solutions. The shear-slip failure analysis was presented based on the numerical results, where the potential failure zone is identified. Information is relevant to the prediction of the maximum sustainable injection rate or pressure. The effects of caprock permeability on the fluid pressure, deformation, stress, and the shear-slip failure zone were also quantitatively studied. It was shown that a larger permeability in caprock and base rock leads to a larger uplift but a smaller shear-slip failure zone.

Revised: September 22, 2014 | Published: November 2, 2013

Citation

Bao J., Z. Xu, and Y. Fang. 2013. A Finite Element Model for Simulation of Carbon Dioxide Sequestration. Environmental Geotechnics 1, no. 3:152-160. PNNL-SA-97945. doi:10.1680/envgeo.13.00024