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Geophysical assessments of renewable gas energy compressed in geologic pore storage reservoirs

Renewable energy resources can indisputably minimize the threat of global warming and climate change. However, they are intermittent and need buffer storage to bridge the time-gap between production (off peak) and demand peaks. Based on geologic and geochemical reasons, the North German Basin has a...

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Autores principales: al Hagrey, Said Attia, Köhn, Daniel, Rabbel, Wolfgang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4048370/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24936391
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2193-1801-3-267
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author al Hagrey, Said Attia
Köhn, Daniel
Rabbel, Wolfgang
author_facet al Hagrey, Said Attia
Köhn, Daniel
Rabbel, Wolfgang
author_sort al Hagrey, Said Attia
collection PubMed
description Renewable energy resources can indisputably minimize the threat of global warming and climate change. However, they are intermittent and need buffer storage to bridge the time-gap between production (off peak) and demand peaks. Based on geologic and geochemical reasons, the North German Basin has a very large capacity for compressed air/gas energy storage CAES in porous saltwater aquifers and salt cavities. Replacing pore reservoir brine with CAES causes changes in physical properties (elastic moduli, density and electrical properties) and justify applications of integrative geophysical methods for monitoring this energy storage. Here we apply techniques of the elastic full waveform inversion FWI, electric resistivity tomography ERT and gravity to map and quantify a gradually saturated gas plume injected in a thin deep saline aquifer within the North German Basin. For this subsurface model scenario we generated different synthetic data sets without and with adding random noise in order to robust the applied techniques for the real field applications. Datasets are inverted by posing different constraints on the initial model. Results reveal principally the capability of the applied integrative geophysical approach to resolve the CAES targets (plume, host reservoir, and cap rock). Constrained inversion models of elastic FWI and ERT are even able to recover well the gradual gas desaturation with depth. The spatial parameters accurately recovered from each technique are applied in the adequate petrophysical equations to yield precise quantifications of gas saturations. Resulting models of gas saturations independently determined from elastic FWI and ERT techniques are in accordance with each other and with the input (true) saturation model. Moreover, the gravity technique show high sensitivity to the mass deficit resulting from the gas storage and can resolve saturations and temporal saturation changes down to ±3% after reducing any shallow fluctuation such as that of groundwater table.
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spelling pubmed-40483702014-06-16 Geophysical assessments of renewable gas energy compressed in geologic pore storage reservoirs al Hagrey, Said Attia Köhn, Daniel Rabbel, Wolfgang Springerplus Research Renewable energy resources can indisputably minimize the threat of global warming and climate change. However, they are intermittent and need buffer storage to bridge the time-gap between production (off peak) and demand peaks. Based on geologic and geochemical reasons, the North German Basin has a very large capacity for compressed air/gas energy storage CAES in porous saltwater aquifers and salt cavities. Replacing pore reservoir brine with CAES causes changes in physical properties (elastic moduli, density and electrical properties) and justify applications of integrative geophysical methods for monitoring this energy storage. Here we apply techniques of the elastic full waveform inversion FWI, electric resistivity tomography ERT and gravity to map and quantify a gradually saturated gas plume injected in a thin deep saline aquifer within the North German Basin. For this subsurface model scenario we generated different synthetic data sets without and with adding random noise in order to robust the applied techniques for the real field applications. Datasets are inverted by posing different constraints on the initial model. Results reveal principally the capability of the applied integrative geophysical approach to resolve the CAES targets (plume, host reservoir, and cap rock). Constrained inversion models of elastic FWI and ERT are even able to recover well the gradual gas desaturation with depth. The spatial parameters accurately recovered from each technique are applied in the adequate petrophysical equations to yield precise quantifications of gas saturations. Resulting models of gas saturations independently determined from elastic FWI and ERT techniques are in accordance with each other and with the input (true) saturation model. Moreover, the gravity technique show high sensitivity to the mass deficit resulting from the gas storage and can resolve saturations and temporal saturation changes down to ±3% after reducing any shallow fluctuation such as that of groundwater table. Springer International Publishing 2014-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4048370/ /pubmed/24936391 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2193-1801-3-267 Text en © al Hagrey et al.; licensee Springer. 2014 This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited.
spellingShingle Research
al Hagrey, Said Attia
Köhn, Daniel
Rabbel, Wolfgang
Geophysical assessments of renewable gas energy compressed in geologic pore storage reservoirs
title Geophysical assessments of renewable gas energy compressed in geologic pore storage reservoirs
title_full Geophysical assessments of renewable gas energy compressed in geologic pore storage reservoirs
title_fullStr Geophysical assessments of renewable gas energy compressed in geologic pore storage reservoirs
title_full_unstemmed Geophysical assessments of renewable gas energy compressed in geologic pore storage reservoirs
title_short Geophysical assessments of renewable gas energy compressed in geologic pore storage reservoirs
title_sort geophysical assessments of renewable gas energy compressed in geologic pore storage reservoirs
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4048370/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24936391
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2193-1801-3-267
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