TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of gas adsorption on coal relative permeability
T2 - a laboratory study
AU - Zhang, Tiancheng
AU - Li, Jimmy Xuekai
AU - Zhu, Yiran
AU - Rudolph, Victor
AU - Chen, Zhongwei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/10
Y1 - 2025/10
N2 - CO2 geo-sequestration and compressed air energy storage in depleted coal seam gas reservoirs are promising techniques for mitigating the greenhouse effect and combating climate change. However, gas adsorption-induced swelling in coal matrices poses challenges to gas injectivity by reducing both coal absolute permeability and relative permeability. While the sorption-induced impact on absolute permeability has been extensively studied, its impact on relative permeability remains little explored. To address this gap, a suite of two-phase flow experiments was conducted with both absorbing and non-absorbing gases. A series of relative permeability curves for helium-water, nitrogen-water, and CO2-water systems were obtained. The results show lower relative permeability for absorbing gas-water systems (nitrogen and CO2) compared to non-absorbing gas (helium) due to the sorption-induced swelling impact. Specifically, the relative permeability of helium-water systems is more than two times higher than that of nitrogen-water systems, followed by CO2-water injection due to differences in adsorption capacity. Finally, quantitative correlations for estimating the relative permeability of nitrogen-water and CO2-water systems were obtained, based on four newly introduced coefficients. These coefficients enable direct estimation of absorbing gas-water two-phase flow behavior (e.g., CO2 sequestration and compressed air storage) in coal. The applicability of these coefficients was further validated using data from other studies, providing useful insights for assessing the injectivity of CO2 geo-sequestration and underground compressed air energy storage.
AB - CO2 geo-sequestration and compressed air energy storage in depleted coal seam gas reservoirs are promising techniques for mitigating the greenhouse effect and combating climate change. However, gas adsorption-induced swelling in coal matrices poses challenges to gas injectivity by reducing both coal absolute permeability and relative permeability. While the sorption-induced impact on absolute permeability has been extensively studied, its impact on relative permeability remains little explored. To address this gap, a suite of two-phase flow experiments was conducted with both absorbing and non-absorbing gases. A series of relative permeability curves for helium-water, nitrogen-water, and CO2-water systems were obtained. The results show lower relative permeability for absorbing gas-water systems (nitrogen and CO2) compared to non-absorbing gas (helium) due to the sorption-induced swelling impact. Specifically, the relative permeability of helium-water systems is more than two times higher than that of nitrogen-water systems, followed by CO2-water injection due to differences in adsorption capacity. Finally, quantitative correlations for estimating the relative permeability of nitrogen-water and CO2-water systems were obtained, based on four newly introduced coefficients. These coefficients enable direct estimation of absorbing gas-water two-phase flow behavior (e.g., CO2 sequestration and compressed air storage) in coal. The applicability of these coefficients was further validated using data from other studies, providing useful insights for assessing the injectivity of CO2 geo-sequestration and underground compressed air energy storage.
KW - CO geo-sequestration
KW - Gas adsorption
KW - Relative permeability
KW - Two-phase flow
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105008880886&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijrmms.2025.106191
DO - 10.1016/j.ijrmms.2025.106191
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105008880886
SN - 1365-1609
VL - 194
JO - International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences
JF - International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences
M1 - 106191
ER -