The penetration of water during water flooding has been observed over many years using several methods. A microfocused X-ray computed tomography scanner can be used to directly observe 3D water flooding in a nondestructive manner. To eliminate the possibility of false images being produced because of X-ray broadening effects, we developed a visualization method by arranging the brightness distribution of all phases involved. Water flooding experiments were conducted using oil-wet and water-wet porous media. The water phase was injected upward into packed glass beads containing an oil phase, and the process was scanned every minute until steady state was reached. Using this scheme, real-time, the water invasion pattern and oil trapping process in clusters of pores and individual pores can be observed clearly. By eliminating false images, the boundary of each phase could be identified with high precision, even in a single pore. Pore-level phenomena, including snap off (which has never before been captured in a real 3D porous medium), piston-like displacement, and the curvature of the interface, were also observed. Direct measurement of the pore throat radius and the contact angle between the wetting and nonwetting phases gave an approximation of the capillary pressure during the piston-like displacement and snap-off processes.
Water imbibition during the waterflooding process of oil production only sweeps part of the oil present. After water disrupts the oil continuity, most oil blobs are trapped in porous rock by capillary forces. Developing an efficient waterflooding scheme is a difficult task; therefore, an understanding of the oil trapping mechanism in porous rock is necessary from a microscopic viewpoint. The development of microfocused X-ray CT scanner technology enables the three-dimensional visualization of multiphase phenomena in a pore-scale. We scanned packed glass beads filled with a nonwetting phase (NWP) and injected wetting phase (WP) in upward and downward injections to determine the microscopic mechanism of immiscible displacement in porous media and the effects of buoyancy forces. We observed the imbibition phenomena for small capillary numbers to understand the spontaneous imbibition mechanism in oil recovery. This study is one of the first attempts to use a microfocused X-ray CT scanner for observing the imbibition and trapping mechanisms. The trapping mechanism in spontaneous imbibition is determined by the pore configuration causing imbibition speed differences in each channel; these differences can disrupt the oil continuity. Gravity plays an important role in spontaneous imbibition. In upward injection, the WP flows evenly and oil is trapped in single or small clusters of pores. In downward injection, the fingering phenomena determine the amount of trapped oil, which is usually in a network scale. Water breakthrough causes dramatic decrease in the oil extraction rate, resulting in lower oil production efficiency.
The current study makes use of life cycle assessment to evaluate the potential greenhouse gas (GHG) savings in coal electricity generation by 5% co-firing with sorghum pellets. The research models the utilization of 100 thousand hectares of under-utilized marginal land in Flores (Indonesia) for biomass sorghum cultivation. Based on equivalent energy content, 1.12 tons of pellets can substitute one ton of coal. The calculated fossil energy ratio of the pellets was 5.8, indicating that the production of pellets for fuel is energetically feasible. Based on a biomass yield of 48 ton/ha•yr, 4.8 million tons of pellets can be produced annually. In comparison with a coal system, the combustion of only pellets to generate 8,300 GWh of electricity can reduce global warming impacts by 7.9 million tons of CO2-eq, which is equivalent to an 85% reduction in GHG emissions. However, these results changed when reduced biomass yield of 24 ton/ha•yr, biomass loss, field emissions, and incomplete combustion were considered in the model. A sensitivity analysis of the above factors showed that the potential GHG savings could decrease from the initially projected 85% to as low as 70%. Overall, the production of sorghum pellets in Flores and their utilization for electricity generation can significantly reduce the reliance on fossil fuels and contribute to climate change mitigation. Some limitations to these conclusions were also discussed herein. The results of this scenario study can assist the Indonesian government in exploring the potential utilization of marginal land for bioenergy development, both in Indonesia and beyond.
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