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Dive into the research topics where Roland T. Okwen is active.

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Featured researches published by Roland T. Okwen.


Water Resources Research | 2015

Influence of small‐scale fluvial architecture on CO2 trapping processes in deep brine reservoirs

Naum I. Gershenzon; Robert W. Ritzi; David F. Dominic; Mohamad Reza Soltanian; Edward Mehnert; Roland T. Okwen

A number of important candidate CO2 reservoirs exhibit sedimentary architecture reflecting fluvial deposition. Recent studies have led to new conceptual and quantitative models for sedimentary architecture in fluvial deposits over a range of scales that are relevant to CO2 injection and storage. We used a geocellular modeling approach to represent this multiscaled and hierarchical sedimentary architecture. With this model, we investigated the dynamics of CO2 plumes, during and after injection, in such reservoirs. The physical mechanism of CO2 trapping by capillary trapping incorporates a number of related processes, i.e., residual trapping, trapping due to hysteresis of the relative permeability, and trapping due to hysteresis of the capillary pressure. Additionally, CO2 may be trapped due to differences in capillary entry pressure for different textural sedimentary facies (e.g., coarser-grained versus finer-grained cross sets). The amount of CO2 trapped by these processes depends upon a complex system of nonlinear and hysteretic characteristic relationships including how relative permeability and capillary pressure vary with brine and CO2 saturation. The results strongly suggest that representing small-scale features (decimeter to meter), including their organization within a hierarchy of larger-scale features, and representing their differences in characteristic relationships can all be critical to understanding trapping processes in some important candidate CO2 reservoirs.


Advances in Water Resources | 2016

Comparison of CO2 trapping in highly heterogeneous reservoirs with Brooks-Corey and van Genuchten type capillary pressure curves

Naum I. Gershenzon; Robert W. Ritzi; David F. Dominic; Edward Mehnert; Roland T. Okwen

Abstract Geological heterogeneities affect the dynamics of carbon dioxide (CO2) plumes in subsurface environments in important ways. Previously, we showed how the dynamics of CO2 plumes are influenced by the multiscaled sedimentary architecture in deep brine fluvial-type reservoirs. The results confirm that representing small-scale features and the corresponding heterogeneity in saturation functions, along with hysteresis in saturation functions, are all critical to understanding capillary trapping processes. Here, we show that when heterogeneity and hysteresis are represented, the two conventional approaches for defining saturation functions, Brooks-Corey and van Genuchten, represent fundamentally different physical systems. The Brooks-Corey approach represents heterogeneity in entry pressures, and leads to trapping by capillary pinning. The van Genuchten approach represents a network of pores transporting the nonwetting fluid, across rock types, with negligible capillary entry pressure, and leads to capillary retardation. These differences significantly affect the large-scale characteristics of CO2 plumes (i.e., their mass, shape, and position).


International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control | 2017

Capillary trapping of CO2 in heterogeneous reservoirs during the injection period

Naum I. Gershenzon; Robert W. Ritzi; David F. Dominic; Edward Mehnert; Roland T. Okwen


Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering | 2017

CO2 trapping in reservoirs with fluvial architecture: Sensitivity to heterogeneity in permeability and constitutive relationship parameters for different rock types

Naum I. Gershenzon; Robert W. Ritzi; David F. Dominic; Edward Mehnert; Roland T. Okwen; Christopher Patterson


Energy Procedia | 2014

Effect of geologic depositional environment on CO2 storage efficiency

Roland T. Okwen; Fang Yang; Scott M. Frailey


Water Resources Research | 2015

Influence of small-scale fluvial architecture on CO2 trapping processes in deep brine reservoirs: CO2 TRAPPING AND FLUVIAL ARCHITECTURE

Naum I. Gershenzon; Robert W. Ritzi; David F. Dominic; Mohamadreza Soltanian; Edward Mehnert; Roland T. Okwen


Energy Procedia | 2014

Basin-scale modeling for CO2 sequestration in the basal sandstone reservoir of the Illinois Basin—Improving the geologic model

Edward Mehnert; James R. Damico; Scott M. Frailey; Hannes E. Leetaru; Roland T. Okwen; Brynne Storsved; Albert J. Valocchi


Energy Procedia | 2013

Development of a Basin-scale Model for CO2 Sequestration in the Basal Sandstone Reservoir of the Illinois Basin-issues, Approach and Preliminary Results☆

Edward Mehnert; James R. Damico; Scott M. Frailey; Hannes E. Leetaru; Yu Feng Lin; Roland T. Okwen; Nathaniel Adams; Brynne Storsved; Albert J. Valocchi


Archive | 2012

CO2 Storage and Enhanced Oil Recovery: Bald Unit Test Site, Mumford Hills Oil Field, Posey County, Indiana

Scott M. Frailey; Ivan G. Krapac; James R. Damico; Roland T. Okwen; Ray W. McKaskle


Archive | 2012

NEAR-WELL PRESSURE DISTRIBUTION OF CO2 INJECTION IN A PARTIALLY PENETRATING WELL

Edward Mehnert; Roland T. Okwen

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Thomas M. Parris

Kentucky Geological Survey

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