Biosurfactant as an Enhancer of Geologic Carbon Storage: Microbial Modification of Interfacial Tension and Contact Angle in Carbon dioxide/Water/Quartz Systems

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Injecting and storing of carbon dioxide (CO2) in deep geologic formations is considered as one of the promising approaches for geologic carbon storage. Microbial wettability alteration of injected CO2 is expected to occur naturally by microorganisms indigenous to the geologic formation or microorganisms intentionally introduced to increase CO2 storage capacity in the target reservoirs. The question as to the extent of microbial CO2 wettability alteration under reservoir conditions still warrants further investigation. This study investigated the effect of a lipopeptide biosurfactant-surfactin, on interfacial tension (IFT) reduction and contact angle alteration in CO2/water/quartz systems under a laboratory setup simulating in situ reservoir conditions. The temporal shifts in the IFT and the contact angle among CO2, brine, and quartz were monitored for different CO2 phases (3 MPa, 30 degrees C for gaseous CO2; 10 MPa, 28 degrees C for liquid CO2; 10 MPa, 37 degrees C for supercritical CO2) upon cultivation of Bacillus subtilis strain ATCC6633 with induced surfactin secretion activity. Due to the secreted surfactin, the IFT between CO2 and brine decreased: from 49.5 to 30 mN/m, by similar to 39% for gaseous CO2; from 28.5 to 13 mN/m, by 54% for liquid CO2; and from 32.5 to 18.5 mN/m, by similar to 43% for supercritical CO2, respectively. The contact angle of a CO2 droplet on a quartz disk in brine increased: from 20.5 degrees to 23.2 degrees, by 1.16 times for gaseous CO2; from 18.4 degrees to 61.8 degrees, by 3.36 times for liquid CO2; and from 35.5 degrees to 47.7 degrees, by 1.34 times for supercritical CO2, respectively. With the microbially altered CO2 wettability, improvement in sweep efficiency of injected and displaced CO2 was evaluated using 2-D pore network model simulations; again the increment in sweep efficiency was the greatest in liquid CO2 phase due to the largest reduction in capillary factor. This result provides novel insights as to the role of naturally occurring biosurfactants in CO2 storage and suggests that biostimulation of biosurfactant production may be a feasible technique for enhancement of CO2 storage capacity.
Publisher
Frontiers
Issue Date
2017-07
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

DEEP SALINE AQUIFERS; BACILLUS-SUBTILIS; SUPERCRITICAL CO2; OIL-RECOVERY; BRINE AQUIFERS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SURFACTANTS; SEQUESTRATION; DIOXIDE; GAS

Citation

Frontiers in microbiology, v.8

ISSN
1664-302X
DOI
10.3389/fmicb.2017.01285
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/225236
Appears in Collection
CE-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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