Skip to content

Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) has been proposed as a promising and necessary technology for mitigating CO2 and the effects of anthropogenic climate change. Deep geological formations, like saline aquifers, are pointed out as promising areas for large-scale storage of CO2. If CCS is implemented on large scale to make noticeable reduction…

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

zasphalt/CO2-Sequestration

 
 

Repository files navigation

co2Sequestration

Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) has been proposed as a promising and necessary technology for mitigating CO2 and the effects of anthropogenic climate change. Deep geological formations, like saline aquifers, are pointed out as promising areas for large-scale storage of CO2. If CCS is implemented on large scale to make noticeable reductions in atmospheric CO2, then it will require a solid scientific foundation defining the coupled hydrologic–geochemical–geomechanical processes that govern the long-term fate of CO2 in the subsurface, migration behavior of CO2, trapping mechanisms, proper utilization of methods to characterize and select sequestration sites, workflow and evaluation process, simulation methods, subsurface engineering to optimize performance, well placement, injection rate and cost, approaches to ensure safe operation, monitoring technology, remediation methods, regulatory overview, and an institutional approach for managing long-term liability. To address the above issues, we demonstrated, reviewed and developed the overall workflow of the process of CO2 sequestration in this study.

About

Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) has been proposed as a promising and necessary technology for mitigating CO2 and the effects of anthropogenic climate change. Deep geological formations, like saline aquifers, are pointed out as promising areas for large-scale storage of CO2. If CCS is implemented on large scale to make noticeable reduction…

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • MATLAB 100.0%