L. Hashemi
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This research aims to overcome the limitations of current hydrogen storagemethods and develop more efficient energy storage systems. Porous materials like sandstones have special characteristics that make them suitable for storing hydrogen underground. To design and operate underground hydrogen storage on a large scale, it is important to understand how fluids move through these materials. The way hydrogen is stored and released is influenced by complex processes happening at a very small scale (μm). To accurately simulate these processes, we need to study how fluids move in the pores, including factors like capillary pressure (the pressure difference between nonwetting and wetting phases, which is one of the main forces acting at pore scale transport) and relative permeability (how easily fluids flow through the pores where other fluids are also present).
Pore-scale modeling is a useful tool for simulating and understanding how hydrogen behaves in the tiny pore spaces of porous materials. These models help us see how hydrogen moves, spreads out, and interacts with the pore walls at a very small level. Another important aspect is studying the contact angles in the system of hydrogen, water, and porous material. These angles tell us about the way these substances interact at the interfaces between solids, liquids, and gases. By studying these processes and measuring contact angles, we can gain a better understanding of how hydrogen is stored and released, considering factors like pressure, temperature, the type of material, and how easily fluids flow through the pores. This knowledge will help us design better systems for storing hydrogen energy in porous materials on a larger scale.
The primary objectives of this thesis are as follows: To develop pore-scale models for simulating and understanding underground hydrogen storage in geological porousmedia. To investigate the contact angle between hydrogen, brine, and sandstone systems and their influence on storage and release mechanisms. To analyze the contact angle for a mixture of hydrogen-methane in the brine/sandstone system and assess its implications for hydrogen storage. To develop a dynamic pore network model to capture the dynamic behavior of hydrogen in geological porous media. To draw conclusions from the findings and propose future research directions in the field of hydrogen energy storage.
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This research aims to overcome the limitations of current hydrogen storagemethods and develop more efficient energy storage systems. Porous materials like sandstones have special characteristics that make them suitable for storing hydrogen underground. To design and operate underground hydrogen storage on a large scale, it is important to understand how fluids move through these materials. The way hydrogen is stored and released is influenced by complex processes happening at a very small scale (μm). To accurately simulate these processes, we need to study how fluids move in the pores, including factors like capillary pressure (the pressure difference between nonwetting and wetting phases, which is one of the main forces acting at pore scale transport) and relative permeability (how easily fluids flow through the pores where other fluids are also present).
Pore-scale modeling is a useful tool for simulating and understanding how hydrogen behaves in the tiny pore spaces of porous materials. These models help us see how hydrogen moves, spreads out, and interacts with the pore walls at a very small level. Another important aspect is studying the contact angles in the system of hydrogen, water, and porous material. These angles tell us about the way these substances interact at the interfaces between solids, liquids, and gases. By studying these processes and measuring contact angles, we can gain a better understanding of how hydrogen is stored and released, considering factors like pressure, temperature, the type of material, and how easily fluids flow through the pores. This knowledge will help us design better systems for storing hydrogen energy in porous materials on a larger scale.
The primary objectives of this thesis are as follows: To develop pore-scale models for simulating and understanding underground hydrogen storage in geological porousmedia. To investigate the contact angle between hydrogen, brine, and sandstone systems and their influence on storage and release mechanisms. To analyze the contact angle for a mixture of hydrogen-methane in the brine/sandstone system and assess its implications for hydrogen storage. To develop a dynamic pore network model to capture the dynamic behavior of hydrogen in geological porous media. To draw conclusions from the findings and propose future research directions in the field of hydrogen energy storage.
This study explores the suitability of quasi-static pore-network modeling for simulating the transport of hydrogen in networks with box-shaped pores and square cylinder throats. The dynamic pore-network modeling results are compared with quasi-static pore-network modeling, and a good agreement is observed when the simulations reach steady-state, for a capillary number of Nc≤10−7. This finding suggests that the quasi-static approach can be used as a reliable and efficient method for studying hydrogen transport in similar networks.
Underground Hydrogen Storage (UHS) is an attractive technology for large-scale (TWh) renewable energy storage. To ensure the safety and efficiency of the UHS, it is crucial to quantify the H2 interactions with the reservoir fluids and rocks across scales, including the micro scale. This paper reports the experimental measurements of advancing and receding contact angles for different channel widths for a H2/water system at P = 10 bar and T = 20 °C using a microfluidic chip. To analyse the characteristics of the H2 flow in straight pore throats, the network is designed such that it holds several straight channels. More specifically, the width of the microchannels range between 50 μm and 130 μm. For the drainage experiments, H2 is injected into a fully water saturated system, while for the imbibition tests, water is injected into a fully H2-saturated system. For both scenarios, high-resolution images are captured starting the introduction of the new phase into the system, allowing for fully-dynamic transport analyses. For better insights, N2/water and CO2/water flows were also analysed and compared with H2/water. Results indicate strong water-wet conditions with H2/water advancing and receding contact angles of, respectively, 13°–39°, and 6°–23°. It was found that the contact angles decrease with increasing channel widths. The receding contact angle measured in the 50 μm channel agrees well with the results presented in the literature by conducting a core-flood test for a sandstone rock. Furthermore, the N2/water and CO2/water systems showed similar characteristics as the H2/water system. In addition to the important characterization of the dynamic wettability, the results are also crucially important for accurate construction of pore-scale simulators.
Characterizing the wettability of hydrogen (H2)–methane (CH4) mixtures in subsurface reservoirs is the first step towards understanding containment and transport properties for underground hydrogen storage (UHS). In this study, we investigate the static contact angles of H2–CH4 mixtures, in contact with brine and Bentheimer sandstone rock using a captive-bubble cell device at different pressures, temperatures and brine salinity values. It is found that, under the studied conditions, H2 and CH4 show comparable wettability behaviour with contact angles ranging between [25°–45°]; and consequently their mixtures behave similar to the pure gas systems, independent of composition, pressure, temperature and salinity. For the system at rest, the acting buoyancy and surface forces allow for theoretical sensitivity analysis for the captive-bubble cell approach to characterize the wettability. Moreover, it is theoretically validated that under similar Bond numbers and similar bubble sizes, the contact angles of H2 and CH4 bubbles and their mixtures are indeed comparable. Consequently, in large-scale subsurface storage systems where buoyancy and capillary are the main acting forces, H2, CH4 and their mixtures will have similar wettability characteristics.
Underground hydrogen storage (UHS) in initially brine-saturated deep porous rocks is a promising large-scale energy storage technology, due to hydrogen's high specific energy capacity and the high volumetric capacity of aquifers. Appropriate selection of a feasible and safe storage site vitally depends on understanding hydrogen transport characteristics in the subsurface. Unfortunately there exist no robust experimental analyses in the literature to properly characterise this complex process. As such, in this work, we present a systematic pore-scale modelling study to quantify the crucial reservoir-scale functions of relative permeability and capillary pressure and their dependencies on fluid and reservoir rock conditions. To conduct a conclusive study, in the absence of sufficient experimental data, a rigorous sensitivity analysis has been performed to quantify the impacts of uncertain fluid and rock properties on these upscaled functions. The parameters are varied around a base-case, which is obtained through matching to the existing experimental study. Moreover, cyclic hysteretic multiphase flow is also studied, which is a relevant aspect for cyclic hydrogen-brine energy storage projects. The present study applies pore-scale analysis to predict the flow of hydrogen in storage formations, and to quantify the sensitivity to the micro-scale characteristics of contact angle (i.e., wettability) and porous rock structure.
Subsurface porous formations provide large capacities for underground hydrogen storage (UHS). Successful utilization of these porous reservoirs for UHS depends on accurate quantification of the hydrogen transport characteristics at continuum (macro) scale, specially in contact with other reservoir fluids. Relative-permeability and capillary-pressure curves are among the macro-scale transport characteristics which play crucial roles in quantification of the storage capacity and efficiency. For a given rock sample, these functions can be determined if pore-scale (micro-scale) surface properties, specially contact angles, are known. For hydrogen/brine/rock system, these properties are yet to a large extent unknown. In this study, we characterize the contact angles of hydrogen in contact with brine and Bentheimer and Berea sandstones at various pressure, temperature, and brine salinity using captive-bubble method. The experiments are conducted close to the in-situ conditions, which resulted in water-wet intrinsic contact angles, about 25 to 45 degrees. Moreover, no meaningful correlation was found with changing tested parameters. We monitor the bubbles over time and report the average contact angles with their minimum and maximum variations. Given rock pore structures, using the contact angles reported in this study, one can define relative-permeability and capillary-pressure functions for reservoir-scale simulations and storage optimization.