Optimum coal properties and engineering processes for CO2 geosequestration in Coal


Autoria(s): Massarotto, P.; Rudolph, V.; Golding, S. D.
Contribuinte(s)

M. Hardin

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

CO2 Geosequestration is seen by many worldwide scientists and engineers as a leading prospective solution to the global warming problem arising from excessive CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions. CO2 geosequestration in coal seams has two important strategic benefits: the process has an extremely low risk of leakage, due to the adsorbed state of the CO2 and the known reservoir context of essentially-zero leakage into which it is be injected; the second benefit arises from the valuable by-product, clean burning coalbed methane gas. This paper presents the authors’ experience, knowledge and perspective on what coal properties and engineering processes would favour implementing a demonstration or commercial CO2 storage-in-coal project, in Queensland, Australia. As such, it may be considered a template for screening studies to select the optimum coal seam reservoir, and for preliminary studies in designing the injection system and predicting production response to the technology. The paper concludes by examining the current knowledge gaps of CO2 geosequestration in coal, identifying further basic and applied research topics.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:103420

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Chemeca

Palavras-Chave #E1 #291899 Interdisciplinary Engineering not elsewhere classified #620499 Primary plant products not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Conference Paper