To reduce global greenhouse gas emissions, permanent storage of carbon dioxide (CO2) captured from major power and other industrial sources, carbon capture and storage (CCS), must be demonstrated as safe, efficient, and cost-effective. Continued research and development in areas such as multi-phase flow, thermodynamics, geochemistry, and geomechanics is needed to improve understanding of the storage process in different geologic formations. Also needed is advanced monitoring technology capable of CO2 plume tracking and leakage detection, as well as improved models for simulation of all aspects of geologic storage in all types of geologic formations. Studies on risks and mitigation of risks associated with long-term storage constitute another set of pressing concerns. Worldwide, dozens of geologic carbon storage field projects have been initiated, and many more laboratory and pilot-scale studies are underway, all contributing to better understanding the complex process of geologic CO2 storage. Participants focusing on research and development in any of the above-mentioned technical areas related to CCS are invited to present their work in this session.
03:30 PM
Jens Birkholzer, Stanislav Glubokovskikh, Yves Guglielmi, Abdullah Cihan, Jonny Rutqvist, Meng Cao, Preston Jordan, Matthew Reagan
03:48 PM
04:06 PM
Neeraj Gupta, Mark Kelley, Joel Sminchak, Jared Hawkins, Joy Frank-Collins, Matthew Young, Christopher Korose, Dawn Deel
04:24 PM
Ying Yu, Tao Bai, John Jiao, Jonathan 'Fred' McLaughlin, Scott Quillinan
04:42 PM
Kendall Taft, Sherilyn Williams-Stroud
05:00 PM
Donald DePaolo, Nicole Lautze, Donald Thomas, Bhavna Arora, Ziqiu Xue, Saeko Mito, Shuo Zhang, Pramod Bhuvankar, Xunfeng Lu, John Christensen
05:18 PM
Minjunshi Xie, Zhehui Jin
05:36 PM
Isaac Gamwo, Deepak Tapriyal, Ward A. Burgess