Cushion gas replacement on underground gas storage in a naturally fracture aquifer: Cushion gas strategies for matrix-independent storage

Energy supply has become a critical global concern. Due to its low cost and high heating value (HV), natural gas is a leading energy source. However, its consumption fluctuates throughout the year due to varying heating demands in different weather conditions, with significantly more usage during co...

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Main Authors: Behnam Sedaee, Zahra Almahmoodi, Mostafa Gilavand, Mahdi Kanaani, Mahnaz Mansouri, Yousef Fathi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-06-01
Series:Results in Engineering
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590123025014148
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Summary:Energy supply has become a critical global concern. Due to its low cost and high heating value (HV), natural gas is a leading energy source. However, its consumption fluctuates throughout the year due to varying heating demands in different weather conditions, with significantly more usage during colder seasons. Underground natural gas storage (UNGS) addresses this variability. UNGS requires cushion gas to maintain reservoir pressure, enabling gas production. Cushion gas usually constitutes 15–75 % of total stored gas, making it costly. Replacing cushion gas is a promising approach to reduce operational costs. This study numerically simulates underground gas storage in a naturally fractured aquifer. It investigates carbon dioxide and nitrogen as potential cushion gas replacements. Various flow scenarios were modeled, and performance was evaluated based on gas recovery, unwanted water production, and produced gas quality. The study focuses on natural gas storage in the Yourtsha aquifer and explores the technical and economic feasibility of using inert gases as substitutes. Results show that carbon dioxide outperforms nitrogen as a cushion gas without accounting for gas dissolution in water. However, when nitrogen dissolution is considered, nitrogen shows higher potential. Including gas dissolution effects also indicates that inert gases perform better than natural gas in displacing fluids and maintaining pressure during storage operations. Furthermore, comparing cumulative injection and production volumes in scenarios with and without gas mixing revealed that mixing negatively impacts storage operation quality. Water production increased in the base scenario due to mixing, adversely affecting seasonal gas injection and production. In scenarios using inert cushion gases, the presence of multiple gas components intensified the mixing phenomenon, resulting in higher water production from gas wells.
ISSN:2590-1230