Despite the large research effort in both public and commercial companies, no textbook has yet been written on this subject. This book aims to provide an overview to the topic of Carbon Capture and Storage (CSS), while at the same time focusing on the dominant processes and the mathematical and numerical methods that need to be employed in order to analyze the relevant systems. The book clearly states the carbon problem and the role of CCS and carbon storage. Thereafter, it provides an introduction to single phase and multi-phase flow in porous media, including some of the most common mathematical analysis and an overview of numerical methods for the equations. A considerable part of the book discusses the appropriate scales of modeling, and how to formulate consistent governing equations at these scales. The book also illustrates real world data sets and how the ideas in the book can be exploited through combinations of analytical and numerical approaches.
Mục lục
Prologue vii
1. The Carbon Problem 1
2. Single-Phase Flow in Porous Media 17
3. Two-Phase Flow in Porous Media 67
4. Large-Scale Models 115
5. Solution Approaches 153
6. Models for CO2 Storage and Leakage 195
Epilogue 225
Appendix 227
Index 237
Giới thiệu về tác giả
JAN M. NORDBOTTEN is a Professor of Mathematics at the
University of Bergen, Norway, and holds a visiting appointment in
the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Princeton
University since 2003. He is the inaugural recipient of the Society
of Industrial and Applied Mathematics Activity Group on Geosciences
(SIAG/GS) Junior Science Prize in 2009, and remains the youngest
ever to achieve a Ph D in Norway. Professor Nordbotten’s
research interests span applied mathematics in the broadest sense,
covering mathematical modeling, analysis, simulation, and
applications.
MICHAEL A. CELIA is the Theodora Shelton Pitney Professor
of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Princeton University,
where he also recently served as Department Chair. Professor Celia
is a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) and the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAS). He
received the 2005 AGU Hydrologic Sciences Award, was the 2008 Darcy
Lecturer for the National Ground Water Association, and was the
2010 Pioneers in Groundwater Lecturer for the American Society of
Civil Engineers. He served for ten years as editor of the journal
Advances in Water Resources, and was a contributing author
for the IPCC Working Group II Special Report on Carbon Dioxide
Capture and Storage. His research interests include flow in porous
media, numerical simulation, groundwater hydrology, ecohydrology,
and carbon sequestration.