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CO2 and CH4 wettabilities of organic-rich shale Bin Pan, Yajun Li, Hongqian Wang, Franca Jones, and Stefan Iglauer Energy Fuels, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.7b01147 • Publication Date (Web): 22 Nov 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 2, 2017
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298 K, Receding, CO₂ 298 K, Advancing, CH₄
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298 K, Receding, CH₄ 323 K, Advancing, CO₂ 323 K, Advancing, CO₂
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323 K, Advancing, CH₄ 323 K, Receding, CH₄
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343 K, Advancing, CO₂ 343 K, Receding, CO₂
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CO2 and CH4 wettabilities of organic-rich shale
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Bin Pana,b,c, Yajun Lia*, Hongqian Wanga, Franca Jonesd, Stefan Iglauerc
3 4
a
5 6
China University of Petroleum (East China), School of Petroleum Engineering, No. 66,Changjiang West Road, Qingdao, China , 266580
b Subsurface Fluidics and
7
Porous Media Laboratory, University of Calgary, Department of Chemical and Petroleum
Engineering, AB, Canada, T2N 1N4
8
c
Curtin University, Department of Petroleum Engineering, 26 Dick Perry Avenue, 6151 Kensington, Australia
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d
Curtin University, Department of Chemistry, Nanochemistry Research Institute, PO Box U1987, Perth WA, 6845
10
Abstract
11
CO2 and CH4 wettabilities of organic-rich shale are important physico-chemical
12
parameters which significantly influence CO2 sequestration and CH4 production.
13
However, there is a serious lack of understanding of these aspects as the data available
14
is scarce. Thus, we evaluated organic-rich shale CO2- and CH4-wettabilities (i.e.
15
brine/shale/gas systems) through advancing and receding brine contact angle
16
measurements as a function of pressure, temperature, salinity and ion type (as these can
17
vary significantly in underground formations). The results indicated that the brine
18
contact angles for both CO2/CH4-brine-shale systems increased with pressure and
19
salinity, but decreased with temperature. However, these effects were much less
20
significant for CH4. Furthermore, the brine contact angles for CO2-brine-shale system
21
reached 180° (i.e. the shale was completely wetted by CO2) when the pressure reached 1
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30 MPa at 343 K and 9 MPa at 298 K. The brine contact angles for the analogue CH4
23
systems was much lower, 50-90°, only indicating weakly water-wet to intermediate-
24
wet conditions. Finally, the brine contact angles for CO2-brine-shale system were also
25
larger for divalent ions (Ca2+, Mg2+) than for monovalent ions (Na+, K+), while ion type
26
had no significant influence on CH4 wettability. However, a similar CO2/CH4 density
27
resulted in a similar wettability. Consequently CH4 could not be used as a proxy for
28
predicting CO2 storage capacities unless they have similar densities.
29 30
Key words: CO2 wettability, CH4 wettability, organic-rich shale.
31
32
1. INTRODUCTION
33
34
Global warming and the greenhouse effect are primarily caused by anthropogenic
35
CO2 emissions. To reduce these emissions, carbon geo-sequestration (CGS) has been
36
identified as an important solution.1,2 In CGS, CO2 is captured from large-point-source
37
emitters, purified, compressed, and injected into geological formations at depths of or
38
greater than 800 m, including saline aquifers,3-5 (depleted) oil and gas reservoirs,4,6-8 or 2
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un-mineable coal seams,4,9 where CO2 is stored in a supercritical (sc) state.1 However,
40
the scCO2 density is, approximately, only 50%-80% of formation brine density, which
41
leads to CO2 upwards migration.10 Four main sequestration mechanisms in CGS are: (a)
42
structural trapping,11,12 (b) residual trapping,13-15 (c) dissolution trapping,5,16,17 and (d)
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mineral trapping.18,19 Another way is to store CO2 in clay-rich formations by CO2
44
adsorption trapping.20-22 In CCS, the advancing brine angle is related to residual
45
trapping, while the receding brine angle is related to structural trapping.23
46
In addition, due to the improvement of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling
47
technologies, shale gas has been recognized as a promising energy resource, which
48
can be exploited commercially.24-26 Shale gas primarily contains methane, which
49
generally exists in organic-rich pores of low permeability shale formations.27,28 Such
50
shale gas recovery can potentially be improved by CO2 injection, while
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simultaneously CO2 is sequestered (adsorption trapping).22,29-36 In such a scenario,
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CO2- and CH4 rock wettabilities play very important roles as they determine fluid
53
spreading and fluid dynamics in the reservoir.12,13,30,37-39
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However, organic content in shale can vary dramatically,40-42 and thus the
55
coverage of shale surfaces with organics is expected to vary substantially. Moreover,
56
only a few research papers reported CO2 wettability of shale4,22,37,43-45, and available
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data is scarce.
58 59
Furthermore, some scholars used CH4 as a proxy for predicting structural CO2 storage capacities, assuming that CO2 and CH4 wettabilities are similar.46-48 This
3
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assumption, however, has not yet been systematically verified, and it is clear that CO2
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and CH4 have fundamentally different physical and molecular properties.23 Moreover,
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as the best of our knowledge, the brine contact angles of CH4-brine-shale system have
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not been reported, although they are of key importance in shale gas production, see
64
above.37-39
65
Thus, we measured the advancing and receding brine contact angles of CO2/CH4-
66
brine-shale systems as a function of pressure, temperature, salinity and ion type in
67
order to aid shale gas production and CO2 geo-storage capacity predictions.
68
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2. EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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2.1. Materials.
72
CO2 (purity = 99.7 mol%), CH4 (purity = 99.7 mol%) and de-gassed brines (0 wt%,
73
1 wt%, and 5 wt% NaCl, CaCl2 and MgCl2 dissolved in deionized water; stirred for 2
74
hr and vaccumed for 12 hr at ambient temperature) were used in all experiments; This
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brine composition was chosen to simulate Shengli shale formation water (which mainly
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contains Na+, Ca2+ and Mg2+ cations,49,50) and the salinities range with formation
77
depth.51
78
The shale sample examined was acquired from well FY-1 in the Shengli shale play
79
formation, Jiyang depression, China. Geological and geo-chemical properties of the
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80
shale sample are listed in Table 1. The shale sample was thoroughly characterized by
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quantitative X-ray diffraction (XRD), total organic content (TOC), scanning electron
82
microscopy-energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDS) and surface roughness
83
tests (Tables 1 and 2 and Figure 1).
84
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Table 1. Geological and geo-chemical properties of the shale sample examined. Lithology
laminar-mixed limestone and mudstone
Depth (m)
3178
TOC (mg/kg)
30000
Vitrinite reflectance (%)
0.76
Matrix density (g/cm3)
2.73
Porositya (%)
8.21
Average pore throat radiusb (nm) Average Permeabilityc (mD)
5 10-6
Chemical compositiond (wt%) Calcite
49
Quartz
19
Illite
16
Ankerite
10
Pyrite
3 5
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Albite a
Porosity measured by NMR,52 using MacroMR12-110H-1 at ambient conditions.
b
c
3
Pore throat radius measured by gas adsorption and mercury intrusion.53
Permeability measured by gas pulse method.54
d
Chemical composition measured with a Bruker AXS XRD instrument.
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Table 2. EDS analysis of the shale sample. Element
Atomic Concentration (%)
Oxygen
53.9
Silicon
13.2
Carbon
28.1
Aluminum
4.0
Magnesium
0.8
88 89
90
(b)
(a)
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91
92 93
(c)
94 95
(d)
96 97
(e) 7
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Figure 1. SEM and atomic force microscopy images of the shale sample used in the
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experiments. (a-c) SEM images; (d) 3D topography; (e) deflection signal, (d) and (e):
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different heights are shown in different colours (black is 0 nm, white is 4000 nm).
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The shale sample consisted mainly of calcite (49 wt%), quartz (19 wt%) and illite
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(16 wt%) and a few other minor minerals, Table 1. The SEM images, Figure 1a-c,
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showed that organic matter filled some of the pores; microfractures and inorganic pores
105
were also identified. The EDS analysis in Table 2 showed that the total atomic carbon
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concentration on the surface was 28.1 mol%. Surface topography of the sample was
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measured via atomic force microscopy (instrument model AFM DSE 95-200), Figure
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1d,e, and the sample was relatively rough when compared to single cystals (e.g. a
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smooth alpha-quartz had a RMS surface roughness of 40 nm)55 and a root-mean-square
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(RMS) surface roughness of 490 nm was measured.
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2.2. Contact angle measurement.
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For the contact angle experiments, a cuboid sample was cut with a high speed
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diamond blade (to 17 mm x 12 mm x 3 mm dimensions). The sample was then cleaned
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with acetone and exposed to air plasma for 3 min to remove any organic surface
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contaminants.56 Subsequently, the advancing brine contact angle (𝜃𝑎 ) and the receding
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brine contact angle (𝜃𝑟 ) were measured by a Krüss DSA 100 instrument, using the tilted
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plate method.57 The cleaned substrate was placed into the pressure cell at a pre-set 8
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temperature (298 K, 323 K or 343 K) and the system was flooded with CO2 or CH4 for
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10 min at ambient pressure. Subsequently the gas pressure was increased to prescribed
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values (0.1 MPa, 5 MPa, 10 MPa, 20 MPa and 30 MPa). After pressure stabilization
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was achieved, a droplet (average volume of ~6 ±1 µL) of brine was dispensed onto the
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surface of the shale substrate through a needle. 𝜃𝑎 was measured just before the
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leading edge of the droplet started to move and 𝜃𝑟 was measured simultaneously at
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the trailing edge of the droplet. A high resolution video camera recorded the dispensing
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process as a movie, and 𝜃𝑎 and 𝜃𝑟 were measured on the images extracted from the
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movies. To obtain reliable and reproducible results, all experiments were conducted
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with vacuumed brines and repeated 3 times (All the experimental data were listed in
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SI-Table 1 Supporting Information). Brines were not equilibrated with CO2 or CH4, as
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it was shown earlier that this has only an insignificant influence on θ during the θ
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measurement.55,58 The standard deviation of these measurements was ± 3° based on
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replicate measurements.
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2.3. Zeta potential measurement.
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For the zeta potential experiments, a Zetasizer Nano instrument (Malvern, UK) was
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used to measure the zeta potentials of a powder suspension prepared from the examined
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shale sample. The shale suspension was prepared as follows: the shale rock sample was
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crushed to very fine particles of less than 10 micrometer size. 0.2 wt% shale powder
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was then added to NaCl, CaCl2 and MgCl2 brines, respectively (0.1 g shale powder into
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50 mL brine). Each dispersion was mixed with a magnetic stirrer for 15 min at a speed
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of 4×100 rpm at 323 K. The solution was subsequently equilibrated for 12 hr. and
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transferred to a measurement cell. The cell temperature was set to 323 K (at ambient
143
pressure), and the zeta potential was measured at least ten times for each solution and
144
the arithmetic average was taken. The standard deviation of these measurements was
145
±1 mV based on replicate measurements. The pH values ranged from 6.72-8.81
146
(measured by RHA-SHKY pH Meter Model 8601), Table 3.
147 148 149
Table 3. The pH values of different solutions at 323 K and ambient pressure. (Note that 0.2 wt% shale powder was added to each solution)
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wt% NaCl
pH
wt% CaCl2
pH
wt% MgCl2
pH
1
8.81
1
7.4
1
8.06
2
8.55
2.5
6.99
2.5
7.89
5
8.19
5
6.72
5
7.62
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3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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3.1. Influence of pressure.
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As pressure and temperature are expected to vary with storage depth,59 both, the
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advancing (𝜃𝑎 ) and the receding (𝜃𝑟 ) brine contact angles of the CO2/CH4-brine-shale 10
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systems were measured at various pressures and temperatures, Figure 2. For the CO2-brine-shale system, the brine contact angles of 𝜃𝑎 and 𝜃𝑟 at
159
ambient conditions (T = 298 K and 0.1 MPa) were measured as 73° and 72°,
160
respectively, which indicated intermediate-wet conditions. Note all the relationships
161
between contact angles and wet state in this work were based on literature standard.12
162
However, at 20 MPa and 343 K, 𝜃𝑎 and 𝜃𝑟 were measured as 130° and 120°,
163
respectively, indicating weakly CO2-wet conditions. At even higher pressure, 30MPa,
164
all brine contact angles reached 180°, i.e. a completely CO2-wet state. In this case, the
165
brine droplet did not stay on the shale substrate and it rolled away immediately once it
166
dropped onto the tilted surface of the shale substrate.
167
On the contrary, for the CH4-brine-shale system, 𝜃𝑎 and 𝜃𝑟 at ambient
168
conditions (T = 298 K and 0.1 MPa) were 54° and 46°, respectively, which indicated
169
strongly to weakly water-wet conditions. 𝜃𝑎 and 𝜃𝑟 at 20 MPa and 343 K were 74°
170
and 70°, respectively (an increase by 42° and 38° when the pressure increased from
171
0.1 MPa to 20 MPa), and this indicated intermediate-wet conditions.
172
Although, the brine contact angles of both, CO2 and CH4, increased with
173
pressure (due to lower density differences between fluids,23,60,61 and stronger
174
intermolecular interactions between CO2/CH4 and the rock surface,23,61-64), consistent
175
with literature data for CO2 on quartz,55,56,61,65,66 mica,65,67 shale,4,44,68 sandstone,44
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coal,69 and for CH4 on coal,70,71 the CH4–shale system was far more water-wet than
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the analogue CO2 system, consistent with data measured on coal.70,71 To further
11
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explore and quantify the reason why the brine contact angles for CO2 and CH4 at the
179
same thermo-physcial conditions were different, we plotted advancing and receding
180
brine contact angles versus the CO2 and CH4 densities, respectively, Figure 3. When
181
the CO2 and CH4 densities were close, the brine contact angles matched. Specifically,
182
when CO2 density was 38 kg/m3, its advancing and receding brine contact angles were
183
70° and 60°, respectively; when CH4 density was 35 kg/m3, its advancing and
184
receding brine contact angle were 65° and 59°. When CO2 and CH4 density reached
185
133 and 135 kg/m3, the CO2- and CH4- advancing brine contact angles were 90° and
186
91°, respectively. These results clearly showed that when the fluid densities were
187
similar, their wettabilities were also similar, consistent with measurements for N2, Ar,
188
SF6 and He on quartz.66 Extrapolations from CH4 behavior to CO2 behavior thus need
189
to be avoided unless they have similar densities.
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180 160 140 298 K, Advancing, CO₂
Contact angle [⁰]
120
298 K, Receding, CO₂ 298 K, Advancing, CH₄
100
298 K, Receding, CH₄ 323 K, Advancing, CO₂ 323 K, Advancing, CO₂
80
323 K, Advancing, CH₄ 323 K, Receding, CH₄
60
343 K, Advancing, CO₂ 343 K, Receding, CO₂
40
343 K, Advancing, CH₄ 343 K, Receding, CH₄
20 0
5
10
15 Pressure [MPa]
191
20
25
30
192
Figure 2. Effect of pressure and temperature on the brine contact angles of the
193
CO2/CH4-5 wt% NaCl brine-shale system. 180 160 140
Contact angle [⁰]
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120 100
Advancing, CO₂
80
Receding, CO₂
60
Advancing, CH₄
40
Receding, CH₄
20 0 0
100
200
300
400
500
Density
600
700
800
900
1000
[kg/m3]
194 195
Figure 3. Effect of fluid density on the brine contact angles of the CO2/CH4-5 wt%
196
NaCl brine-shale system (CO2 and CH4 density were taken from literature data.72,73) 13
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198
3.2. Influence of temperature.
199
𝜃𝑎 and 𝜃𝑟 decreased with temperature, Figure 2. This is consistent with
200
molecular dynamics simulations for CO2 on quartz,62 and some experimental data for
201
CO2 on quartz,61,66 and mica,67,74 where 𝜃𝑎 and 𝜃𝑟 decreased with temperature.
202
Specifically, for the CO2-brine-shale system, when temperature increased from 298 K
203
to 343 K at 10 MPa pressure, 𝜃𝑎 decreased by 60° from 180° to 120° and 𝜃𝑟
204
decreased by 80° from 180° to 100°, thus changing from completely CO2-wet to weakly
205
CO2-wet. For the CH4-brine-shale system, when temperature increased from 298 K to
206
343 K at 10 MPa pressure, 𝜃𝑎 decreased by 12° from 79° to 67°, and 𝜃𝑟 decreased
207
by 12° from 65° to 53°, thus the shale substrate became more water-wet. Note that the
208
temperature had a stronger influence on CO2 wettability than on CH4 wettability.
209
However, other researchers found an opposite trend for the effect of temperature on
210
CO2 wettability,37,69,75,76 or no temperature influence.77 A recent study reported that
211
temperature influences contact angles through density and Van der Waals forces.31 For
212
CO2-wet surfaces, Van der Waals forces (solid-CO2) decrease with increasing
213
temperature (causing CO2 to detach more from the surface, which renders the surface
214
more water-wet); however, hydrogen bonds are increasingly broken on water-wet
215
surfaces with increasing temperature (thus reducing the water-wetness of the surface).
216
Therefore, here in our work, a CO2-wet shale surface became more water-wet with
217
temperature increase. Furthermore, we did not find any previous report on the effect of
218
temperature on CH4 wettability. 14
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3.3. Influence of salinity and salt type.
221
The effect of salinity on the brine contact angles was investigated at 298 K and 10
222
MPa, Figure 4. Salinities tested ranged from (0 to 5) wt%.
180 Advancing, CO₂
160
Receding, CO₂ Advancing, CH₄
140
Contact angle [°]
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Receding, CH₄
120 100 80 60 40 20 0
1
2
3
4
5
Salinity [% wt]
223 224
Figure 4. Effect of salinity on the advancing and receding brine contact angles of the
225
CO2 and CH4-NaCl brine-shale systems at 298 K and 10 MPa.
226
227
For the CO2-brine-shale system, 𝜃𝑎 increased by 90° and 𝜃𝑟 by 97° when NaCl
228
salinity increased from 0 to 5 wt% at 298 K and 10 MPa. For the CH4-brine-shale
229
system, 𝜃𝑎 increased by 15° and 𝜃𝑟 by 8° when NaCl salinity increased from 0 to 5
230
wt% at the same thermodynamic condition, consistent with literature data for CO2 on
231
quartz,61 mica,67,74,78 shale37 and other rock minerals.65,75,79 Thus salinity had a larger
232
influence on CO2 wettability than on CH4 wettability. Furthermore the brine contact 15
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angles for divalent cations were higher than those for monovalent cations (Figure 5),
234
following the order MgCl2 > CaCl2 > NaCl, consistent with literature data for CO2 on
235
quartz,61 mica,78 coal,80 and shale.37 However, these ion types only had an insignificant
236
influence (2°) on CH4 wettability (which is within experimental error). Note that
237
literature data for the effect of salinity and salt type on CH4 wettability is scarce. 110 100 90 80
Contact angle [°]
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343 K, Advancing, CO₂
50
343 K, Receding, CO₂
40
298 K, Advancing, CH₄
30
298 K, Receding, CH₄
20 10 0 Na⁺
Ca²⁺
Mg²⁺
Ion type
238 239
Figure 5. Effect of salt type on the advancing and receding brine contact angles at 10
240
MPa and 1 wt% salt concentration.
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Zeta Potential [mV]
5 0 -5 -10
NaCl CaCl₂
-15
MgCl₂ -20 0
1
2
3
4
5
Concentration of different brines [wt%]
242
(a)
243
244
10 5
Zeta Potential [mV]
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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0 -5
NaCl
-10
CaCl₂ -15
MgCl₂
-20 0
0.5
1
1.5
Ionic strength [mol/kg]
245
(b)
246
247
Figure 6. Shale zeta potentials as a function of (a) salt concentration and (b) ionic
248
strength of the brine (in which the shale was dispersed) at 323 K. The error bars show
249
the standard error of the measurements. 17
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251
The effect of salinity and ion type on the brine contact angles can be explained
252
with the diffuse double layer theory with specific adsorption of ions included.37,81,82 It
253
is clear that at higher pH values more protons are released from the surface OH
254
groups, which results in a more negative surface charge (= more negative zeta
255
potential). However, we cannot measure zeta potentials at high pressures (due to
256
instrument limitations), thus we measured and reported zeta potentials at ambient
257
pressure (Figure 6). Note that efforts were made to correlate such (ambient condition)
258
zeta potential measurements to real reservoir conditions.80 Trendwise, the contact
259
angles followed the same trends with temperature and salinity at ambient and high
260
pressure, while the zeta potentials also followed the same trend at ambient pressure;
261
thus it was assumed that zeta potentials probably also follow a similar trend at high
262
pressures.
263
Furthermore, with the addition of NaCl, CaCl2 or MgCl2 into the shale suspension,
264
the zeta potential increased, Figure 6. Mechanistically, this increase in zeta potential is
265
caused by adsorption of divalent ions onto the shale surface, which leads to a more
266
positive charge.83,84 However, sodium ions are not so strongly adsorbed, so here the 85,86
1 n 2 As the ionic strength ( I ci zi , where I is the ionic 2 i 1
267
effect is less significant.
268
strength, c is the concentration and z is the ion charge) increased, the surface charge
269
was more and more screened which resulted in more positive zeta potentials. This
270
charge screening effect is stronger for Mg2+ and Ca2+ than for Na+ (due to their higher 18
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271
ionic strength).23 At very high ionic strengths charge reversal occurred for Mg2+ and
272
Ca2+, presumably due to specific adsorption of the divalent ions on the clay or the
273
calcitic shale surface.83,84 The ranking Mg2+ > Ca2+ based on the de-wetting ability and
274
zeta potential is probably caused by the stronger adsorption for Mg2+ than Ca2+ onto the
275
shale surface, consistent with other experimental results (where the zeta potential for
276
Mg2+ solutions was more positive than that for Ca2+ solutions).87 In addition, one study
277
investigated the effect of individual ionic concentration on zeta potential in calcite
278
solutions and found that Ca2+ can only change zeta potentials from negative to positive
279
values at high concentrations, while small additions of Mg2+ into the calcite solution
280
can readily achieve a positive zeta potential,88 consistent with our results. Mg2+ has a
281
stronger effect on calcite surface charge due to ionic adsorption88; and recall that the
282
calcite content in our shale sample was high (49 wt%). However, some other study
283
reported that Ca2+ had stronger adsorption ability than Mg2+ on shale,26 and note that
284
the primary composition in its shale sample was quartz.26 The discrepancy of divalent
285
ion adsorption capacity here probably was due to the composition of the shale sample.
286
Furthermore, this charge reversal has been previously associated with higher contact
287
angles.86,89,90 Moreover, once the zeta potential approaches zero, the surface polarity
288
decreases and the affinity of the shale surface for water decreases so that the brine
289
contact angle increases.23,89,91-93
290
291
3.4. Influence of total organic carbon content.
19
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292
Energy & Fuels
We furthermore investigated which influence the total organic carbon content (TOC)
293
has on the brine contact angle of brine-CO2-shale, Table 4. However, only a few
294
studies reported the CO2-wettability of shale, 22,37,43,44 thus data is scarce.
295
296
Table 4. The effect of TOC on shale wettability. Chemical
Mineral
TOC
NaCl
T
P
𝜃𝑟
𝜃𝑎 Reference
Composition
wt%
Calcite
mg/kg
MPa
°
°
49
0.1
60
70
Quartz
19
10
107
125
Illite
16
20
120
130
Ankerite
10
30
180
180
Other
6
Illite
33
0.1
20
30
Quartz
31
10
21
24
Literature data37,44
30000
810
wt%
5
5.85
K
343
This work
343
Analcite
15
15
25
40
Other
21
20
40
48
297
298
Clearly the high TOC shale was much more CO2-wet. Precisely, 𝜃𝑎 increased by
299
18° from 30° to 48°, and 𝜃𝑟 increased by 10° from 20° to 30°, when the pressure
300
increased from 0.1 MPa to 20 MPa for the low TOC shale; while 𝜃𝑎 increased by 110°
301
from 70° to 180°, and 𝜃𝑟 increased by 120° from 60° to 180°, when pressure increased 20
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Page 22 of 39
302
from 0.1 MPa to 30 MPa for the high TOC shale. It is thus clear that higher TOC and
303
thus a more hydrophobic surface leads to higher CO2-wettability, consistent with data
304
measured for CO2 on other hydrophobic surfaces, i.e. alkylated mica,74 quartz,94 silica,95
305
coal,69,96 and minerals aged in crude oil.97,98 Furthermore, one recent study reported the
306
effect of TOC on shale wettability (TOC ranged from 0.16 wt% to 23.4 wt%), and a
307
consistent conclusion with ours was reached.22 However, our result was inconsistent
308
with another recent report where CO2 wettability of organic-rich shale had no
309
relationship with organic matter content, which may be attributed to the remaining
310
mineral composition or the spatial distribution of the organics in the shale.43
311
312
4. CONCLUSION.
313 314
Organic-rich shale formations are an important fuel resource and they are also
315
potential CO2 sinks.34,35,46,99,100 In this context, CO2 and CH4 wettabilities are important
316
parameters as they determine the security and capacity of CO2 sequestration and shale
317
production respectively.12,13,30,37-39 However, their wettabilities in organic-rich shale
318
formation are poorly understood. We thus measured them as a function of pressure,
319
temperature, salinity, and ion type in order to aid CO2 geo-storage and CH4 production
320
schemes. Following conclusions were reached:
321
322
The brine contact angles of both, CO2 and CH4, increased with pressure, consistent
323
with literature data,4,44,55,56,61,65-71 while the CH4–shale system was far more water-wet
21
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324
than the analogue CO2 system, consistent with data measured on coal,70,71 However, a
325
similar CO2/CH4 density resulted in a similar wettability, consistent with literature
326
data.66 Thus, extrapolations from CH4 behavior to CO2 behavior need to be avoided
327
unless they have similar densities. The brine contact angles for CO2 and CH4 decreased
328
with temperature, consistent with literature data,61,62,66,67,74 while the temperature had a
329
stronger influence on CO2 wettability than on CH4 wettability. Higher salinity resulted
330
in higher brine contact angles, consistent with literature data,37,61,65,67,74,75,78,79 while the
331
brine contact angles for divalent cations were higher than those for monovalent cations,
332
consistent with literature data.37,61,78,80 However, the ion type only had an insignificant
333
influence (2°) on CH4 wettability. The effect of salinity and ion type on the brine contact
334
angles can be explained with the diffuse double layer theory with specific adsorption
335
of ions included.37,81,82 Higher TOC led to higher CO2 wettability, consistent with one
336
recent report,22 and other literature data.69,74,94-98
337 338
Especially noteworthy is that we reported CH4 wettability of shale here for the first time, which is of key importance to shale gas production.
339
340
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
341
342
SI-Table 1. Advancing and receding brine contact angles (°) of CO2/CH4-brine -
343
shale for all cases measured in this work. T/k
P/MPa
Advancing for CO2
Receding for CO2 22
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298
Page 24 of 39
0.1
76
74
77
73
72
74
5
90
90
89
88
87
86
10
180
180
180
180
180
180
20
180
180
180
180
180
180
30
180
180
180
180
180
180
0.1
73
72
73
71
70
68
5
88
87
88
85
84
84
10
130
132
133
110
111
108
20
180
180
180
180
180
180
30
180
180
180
180
180
180
0.1
70
71
70
60
60
58
5
80
82
79
70
71
71
10
125
125
125
107
108
109
20
130
130
130
120
118
121
30
180
180
180
180
180
180
T/k
P/MPa
Advancing for CH4
298
0.1
54
55
56
46
46
45
5
65
65
64
59
60
60
10
79
82
81
65
65
65
15
92
93
95
79
82
81
20
96
94
96
84
85
86
0.1
52
50
51
42
43
44
5
63
64
63
50
51
50
10
67
65
67
58
60
57
15
81
83
80
75
74
75
20
91
90
92
78
80
81
0.1
50
50
49
40
39
38
5
63
62
60
51
48
49
10
67
64
64
53
52
53
15
67
68
69
60
61
62
20
74
75
77
70
71
70
323
343
323
343
Receding for CH4
344 345 346
AUTHOR INFORMATION
347
348
Corresponding Author
349
*E-mail:
[email protected]. 23
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Energy & Fuels
350
ORCID
351
Bin Pan:0000-0003-3482-5660
352
Yajun Li: 0000-0001-6693-017X
353
Franca Jones: 0000-0002-8461-8291
354
Stefan Iglauer: 0000-0002-8080-1590
355
Notes
356
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
357
358
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
359
360
This project was supported by the National Science and Technology Major Project
361
(2016ZX05023-001, 2017ZX05049-006), 973 Program (2014CB239103) and the
362
Chinese Scholarship Council.
363
364
ABBREVIATIONS
365
366
CO2
carbon dioxide
367
N2
nitrogen
24
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
368
Ar
argon
369
SF6
sulfur hexafluoride
370
He
helium
371
NaCl
sodium chloride
372
CaCl2
calcium chloride
373
MgCl2 magnesium chloride
Page 26 of 39
374
375
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