| Title | Thermophysical Properties of Pore-Confined Supercritical CO2 by Vibrating Tube Densimetry |
|---|---|
| Authors | Miroslaw S. Gruszkiewicz, David J. Wesolowski, and David R. Cole |
| Year | 2011 |
| Conference | Stanford Geothermal Workshop |
| Keywords | adsorption, supercritical carbon dioxide |
| Abstract | Properties of fluids confined in pore systems are needed for modeling fluid flow, fluid-rock interactions, and changes in reservoir porosity. The properties of CO2-rich fluids are particularly relevant to geothermal heat mining using carbon dioxide instead of water. While manometric, volumetric, and gravimetric techniques have been used successfully to investigate adsorption of low-density subcritical vapors, the results have not been satisfactory at higher, liquid-like densities of supercritical fluids. Even if the requirements for high experimental accuracy in the neighborhood of the critical region were met, these methods are fundamentally unable to deliver the total adsorption capacity, since the properties (e.g. density) of the adsorbed phase are in general not known. |