Publication Type |
report |
Research Institute |
Institute for Clean and Secure Energy (ICSE) |
Author |
Smith, Philip J.; Deo, Milind; Eddings, Eric G.; Sarofim, Adel F.; Gneishen, K.; Hradisky, Michal; Kelly, Kerry; Mandalaparty, P.; Zhang, H. |
Title |
Underground coal thermal treatment - Task 6 topical report, Utah Clean Coal Program - Reporting Period: October 2009 - September 2011 |
Date |
2012-01-11 |
Description |
The long-term objective of this work is to develop a transformational energy production technology by in-situ thermal treatment of a coal seam for the production of substitute natural gas (SNG) while leaving much of the coal's carbon in the ground. This process converts coal to a high-efficiency, low-GHG emitting gas fuel. It holds the potential of providing environmentally acceptable access to previously unusable coal resources. This topical report discusses the development of experimental capabilities, the collection of available data, and the development of simulation tools to obtain process thermo-chemical and geo-thermal parameters in preparation for the eventual demonstration in a coal seam. It also includes experimental and modeling studies of CO2 sequestration. Efforts focused on: • Constructing a suite of three different coal pyrolysis reactors. These reactors offer the ability to gather heat transfer, mass transfer and kinetic data during coal pyrolysis under conditions that mimic in situ conditions (Subtask 6.1). • Studying the operational parameters for various underground thermal treatment processes for oil shale and coal and completing a design matrix analysis for the underground coal thermal treatment (UCTT). This analysis yielded recommendations for terms of targeted coal rank, well orientation, rubblization, presence of oxygen, temperature, pressure, and heating sources (Subtask 6.2). • Developing capabilities for simulating UCTT, including modifying the geometry as well as the solution algorithm to achieve long simulation times in a rubblized coal bed by resolving the convective channels occurring in the representative domain (Subtask 6.3). • Studying the reactive behavior of carbon dioxide (CO2) with limestone, sandstone, arkose (a more complex sandstone) and peridotite, including mineralogical changes and brine chemistry for the different initial rock compositions (Subtask 6.4). Arkose exhibited the highest tendency of participating in mineral reactions, which can be attributed to the geochemical complexity of its initial mineral assemblage. In experiments with limestone, continuous dissolution was observed with the release of CO2 gas, indicated by the increasing pressure in the reactor (formation of a gas chamber). This occurred due to the lack of any source of alkali to buffer the solution. Arkose has the geochemical complexity for permanent sequestration of CO2 as carbonates and is also relatively abundant. The effect of including NH3 in the injected gas stream was also investigated in this study. Precipitation of calcite and trace amounts of ammonium zeolites was observed. A batch geochemical model was developed using Geochemists Workbench (GWB). Degassing effect in the experiments was corrected using the sliding fugacity model in GWB. Experimental and simulation results were compared and a reasonable agreement between the two was observed. |
Type |
Text |
Subject |
SNG; substitute natural gas; coal pyrolysis; in-situ; underground coal thermal treatment; UCTT; Geochemists Workbench; GWB |
Bibliographic Citation |
Smith, P. J., Deo, M., Eddings, E. G., Sarofim, A. F., Gneishen, K., Hradisky, M., Kelly, K., Mandalaparty, P., & Zhang, H. (2012). Underground Coal Thermal Treatment - Task 6 Topical Report, Utah Clean Coal Program - Reporting Period: October 2009 - September 2011. |
Relation Has Part |
DOE Award Number: DE-NT0005015 |
ARK |
ark:/87278/s66q4wd8 |
Setname |
ir_eua |
ID |
214590 |
Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s66q4wd8 |