Author
Listed:
- Hequn Gao
(Exploration and Development Research Institute, East China Oil and Gas Company, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China
Key Laboratory of Deep Coalbed Methane Exploration and Development, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China)
- Yuchen Tian
(School of Resources and Geosciences, China University of Mining and Technology, Xuzhou 221116, China)
- Helong Zhang
(School of Resources and Geosciences, China University of Mining and Technology, Xuzhou 221116, China)
- Yanzhi Liu
(School of Resources and Geosciences, China University of Mining and Technology, Xuzhou 221116, China)
- Yinan Cui
(Exploration and Development Research Institute, East China Oil and Gas Company, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China
Key Laboratory of Deep Coalbed Methane Exploration and Development, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China)
- Xin Li
(Exploration and Development Research Institute, East China Oil and Gas Company, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China
Key Laboratory of Deep Coalbed Methane Exploration and Development, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China)
- Yue Gong
(Exploration and Development Research Institute, East China Oil and Gas Company, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China
Key Laboratory of Deep Coalbed Methane Exploration and Development, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China)
- Chao Li
(Exploration and Development Research Institute, East China Oil and Gas Company, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China
Key Laboratory of Deep Coalbed Methane Exploration and Development, SINOPEC, Nanjing 210000, China)
- Chuncan He
(School of Environment and Civil Engineering, Dongguan University of Technology, Dongguan 523808, China)
Abstract
Supercritical CO 2 modifies deep coal reservoirs through the coupled effects of adsorption-induced deformation and geochemical dissolution. CO 2 adsorption causes coal matrix swelling and facilitates micro-fracture propagation, while CO 2 –water reactions generate weakly acidic fluids that dissolve minerals such as calcite and kaolinite. These synergistic processes remove pore fillings, enlarge flow channels, and generate new dissolution pores, thereby increasing the total pore volume while making the pore–fracture network more heterogeneous and structurally complex. Such reservoir restructuring provides the intrinsic basis for CO 2 injectivity and subsequent CH 4 displacement. Both adsorption capacity and volumetric strain exhibit Langmuir-type growth characteristics, and permeability evolution follows a three-stage pattern—rapid decline, slow attenuation, and gradual rebound. A negative exponential relationship between permeability and volumetric strain reveals the competing roles of adsorption swelling, mineral dissolution, and stress redistribution. Swelling dominates early permeability reduction at low pressures, whereas fracture reactivation and dissolution progressively alleviate flow blockage at higher pressures, enabling partial permeability recovery. Injection pressure is identified as the key parameter governing CO 2 migration, permeability evolution, sweep efficiency, and the CO 2 -ECBM enhancement effect. Higher pressures accelerate CO 2 adsorption, diffusion, and sweep expansion, strengthening competitive adsorption and improving methane recovery and CO 2 storage. However, excessively high pressures enlarge the permeability-reduction zone and may induce formation instability, while insufficient pressures restrict the effective sweep volume. An optimal injection-pressure window is therefore essential to balance injectivity, sweep performance, and long-term storage integrity. Importantly, the enhanced methane production and permanent CO 2 storage achieved in this study contribute directly to greenhouse gas reduction and improved sustainability of subsurface energy systems. The multi-field coupling insights also support the development of low-carbon, environmentally responsible CO 2 -ECBM strategies aligned with global sustainable energy and climate-mitigation goals. The integrated experimental–numerical framework provides quantitative insight into the coupled adsorption–deformation–flow–geochemistry processes in deep coal seams. These findings form a scientific basis for designing safe and efficient CO 2 -ECBM injection strategies and support future demonstration projects in heterogeneous deep coal reservoirs.
Suggested Citation
Hequn Gao & Yuchen Tian & Helong Zhang & Yanzhi Liu & Yinan Cui & Xin Li & Yue Gong & Chao Li & Chuncan He, 2026.
"Mechanisms and Multi-Field-Coupled Responses of CO 2 -Enhanced Coalbed Methane Recovery in the Yanchuannan and Jinzhong Blocks Toward Improved Sustainability and Low-Carbon Reservoir Management,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(2), pages 1-21, January.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:2:p:765-:d:1838609
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