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Dive into the research topics where Luca Trevisan is active.

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Featured researches published by Luca Trevisan.


Water Resources Research | 2015

Experimental study on effects of geologic heterogeneity in enhancing dissolution trapping of supercritical CO2

Elif Agartan; Luca Trevisan; Abdullah Cihan; Jens T. Birkholzer; Quanlin Zhou; Tissa H. Illangasekare

Dissolution trapping is one of the primary mechanisms that enhance the storage security of supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) in saline geologic formations. When scCO2 dissolves in formation brine produces an aqueous solution that is denser than formation brine, which leads to convective mixing driven by gravitational instabilities. Convective mixing can enhance the dissolution of CO2 and thus it can contribute to stable trapping of dissolved CO2. However, in the presence of geologic heterogeneities, diffusive mixing may also contribute to dissolution trapping. The effects of heterogeneity on mixing and its contribution to stable trapping are not well understood. The goal of this experimental study is to investigate the effects of geologic heterogeneity on mixing and stable trapping of dissolved CO2. Homogeneous and heterogeneous media experiments were conducted in a two-dimensional test tank with various packing configurations using surrogates for scCO2 (water) and brine (propylene glycol) under ambient pressure and temperature conditions. The results show that the density-driven flow in heterogeneous formations may not always cause significant convective mixing especially in layered systems containing low-permeability zones. In homogeneous formations, density-driven fingering enhances both storage in the deeper parts of the formation and contact between the host rock and dissolved CO2 for the potential mineralization. On the other hand, for layered systems, dissolved CO2 becomes immobilized in low-permeability zones with low-diffusion rates, which reduces the risk of leakage through any fault or fracture. Both cases contribute to the permanence of the dissolved plume in the formation.


Water Resources Research | 2015

Experimental analysis of spatial correlation effects on capillary trapping of supercritical CO2 at the intermediate laboratory scale in heterogeneous porous media

Luca Trevisan; Ronny Pini; Abdullah Cihan; Jens T. Birkholzer; Quanlin Zhou; Tissa H. Illangasekare

Author(s): Trevisan, L; Pini, R; Cihan, A; Birkholzer, JT; Zhou, Q; Illangasekare, TH | Abstract:


Water Resources Research | 2017

Imaging and quantification of spreading and trapping of carbon dioxide in saline aquifers using meter‐scale laboratory experiments

Luca Trevisan; Ronny Pini; Abdullah Cihan; Jens T. Birkholzer; Quanlin Zhou; Ana González-Nicolás; Tissa H. Illangasekare

The role of capillary forces during buoyant migration of CO2 is critical toward plume immobilization within the postinjection phase of a geological carbon sequestration operation. However, the inherent heterogeneity of the subsurface makes it very challenging to evaluate the effects of capillary forces on the storage capacity of these formations and to assess in situ plume evolution. To overcome the lack of accurate and continuous observations at the field scale and to mimic vertical migration and entrapment of realistic CO2 plumes in the presence of a background hydraulic gradient, we conducted two unique long-term experiments in a 2.44 m × 0.5 m tank. X-ray attenuation allowed measuring the evolution of a CO2-surrogate fluid saturation, thus providing direct insight into capillarity-dominated and buoyancy-dominated flow processes occurring under successive drainage and imbibition conditions. The comparison of saturation distributions between two experimental campaigns suggests that layered-type heterogeneity plays an important role on nonwetting phase (NWP) migration and trapping, because it leads to (i) longer displacement times (3.6 months versus 24 days) to reach stable trapping conditions, (ii) limited vertical migration of the plume (with center of mass at 39% versus 55% of aquifer thickness), and (iii) immobilization of a larger fraction of injected NWP mass (67.2% versus 51.5% of injected volume) as compared to the homogenous scenario. While these observations confirm once more the role of geological heterogeneity in controlling buoyant flows in the subsurface, they also highlight the importance of characterizing it at scales that are below seismic resolution (1–10 m).


Water Resources Research | 2017

Investigation of representing hysteresis in macroscopic models of two‐phase flow in porous media using intermediate scale experimental data

Abdullah Cihan; Jens Birkholzer; Luca Trevisan; Ana González-Nicolás; Tissa H. Illangasekare

Author(s): Cihan, A; Birkholzer, J; Trevisan, L; Gonzalez-Nicolas, A; Illangasekare, T | Abstract:


Scientific Reports | 2018

Author Correction: A method to generate small-scale, high-resolution sedimentary bedform architecture models representing realistic geologic facies

Tip Meckel; Luca Trevisan; Prasanna Ganesan Krishnamurthy

A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.


Scientific Reports | 2017

A method to generate small-scale, high-resolution sedimentary bedform architecture models representing realistic geologic facies

Tip Meckel; Luca Trevisan; Prasanna Ganesan Krishnamurthy

Small-scale (mm to m) sedimentary structures (e.g. ripple lamination, cross-bedding) have received a great deal of attention in sedimentary geology. The influence of depositional heterogeneity on subsurface fluid flow is now widely recognized, but incorporating these features in physically-rational bedform models at various scales remains problematic. The current investigation expands the capability of an existing set of open-source codes, allowing generation of high-resolution 3D bedform architecture models. The implemented modifications enable the generation of 3D digital models consisting of laminae and matrix (binary field) with characteristic depositional architecture. The binary model is then populated with petrophysical properties using a textural approach for additional analysis such as statistical characterization, property upscaling, and single and multiphase fluid flow simulation. One example binary model with corresponding threshold capillary pressure field and the scripts used to generate them are provided, but the approach can be used to generate dozens of previously documented common facies models and a variety of property assignments. An application using the example model is presented simulating buoyant fluid (CO2) migration and resulting saturation distribution.


International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control | 2014

Investigation of mechanisms of supercritical CO2 trapping in deep saline reservoirs using surrogate fluids at ambient laboratory conditions

Luca Trevisan; Abdullah Cihan; Fritjof Fagerlund; Elif Agartan; Hiroko Mori; Jens T. Birkholzer; Quanlin Zhou; Tissa H. Illangasekare


International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control | 2017

Impact of 3D capillary heterogeneity and bedform architecture at the sub-meter scale on CO 2 saturation for buoyant flow in clastic aquifers

Luca Trevisan; Prasanna Ganesan Krishnamurthy; Tip Meckel


International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control | 2015

Evaluation of relative permeability functions as inputs to multiphase flow models simulating supercritical CO 2 behavior in deep geologic formations

Hiroko Mori; Luca Trevisan; Tissa H. Illangasekare


Energy Procedia | 2014

A connectivity-based modeling approach for representing hysteresis in macroscopic two-phase flow properties

Abdullah Cihan; Jens T. Birkholzer; Luca Trevisan; Marco Bianchi; Quanlin Zhou; Tissa H. Illangasekare

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Abdullah Cihan

Colorado School of Mines

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Jens T. Birkholzer

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Quanlin Zhou

University of California

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Ana González-Nicolás

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Tip Meckel

University of Texas at Austin

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Ronny Pini

Imperial College London

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Elif Agartan

Colorado School of Mines

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Hiroko Mori

Colorado School of Mines

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