GSA Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, USA - 2019

Paper No. 252-4
Presentation Time: 8:50 AM

BIOGEOCHEMICAL INTERACTIONS BETWEEN COAL MINE WATER AND UNCONVENTIONAL RESERVOIR WELL CEMENT


GULLIVER, Djuna, Department of Energy, National Energy Technology Laboratory, 1032 Welfer St, Pittsburgh, PA 15217, GARDINER, James, Battelle, Pittsburgh, PA 15236, ROSS, Daniel, Leidos, Pittsburgh, PA 15236, LIPUS, Daniel, GFZ German Research Center, Potsdam, Germany and KUTCHKO, Barbara, U.S. Department of Energy, National Energy Technology Laboratory, 626 Cochrans Mill Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15236

Expansion of unconventional reservoir activity has led to an increased interest in management of produced fluids, and this management often ignores the fluid from overlying coalbeds. However, unconventional natural gas wells drilled in Northern Appalachia often pass through abandoned coal mines before reaching the Marcellus or Utica formations. Biogeochemical interactions between coal mine waters and gas well cements have the potential to alter the cement and compromise its sealing integrity. This study investigates the mineralogical, geochemical, and microbial changes of cement cores exposed to natural coal mine waters.

Static reactors with Class H Portland cement cores and water samples from an abandoned bituminous Pittsburgh coal mine simulated the cement-fluid interactions at relevant temperature for time periods of 1, 2, 4, and 6 weeks. Fluids were analyzed for cation and anion concentrations and extracted DNA was analyzed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and shotgun sequencing. Cement core material was evaluated via scanning electron microscope.

Results suggest that the sampled coal mine water altered the permeability and matrix mineralogy of the cement cores. Scanning electron microscope images display an increase in mineral precipitates inside the cement matrix over the course of the experiment. Chemistry results from the reaction vessels’ effluent waters display decreases in dissolved calcium, iron, silica, chloride, and sulfate. The microbial community decreased in diversity over the 6-week experiment, with Hydrogenophaga emerging as dominant. These results provide insight in the complex microbial-fluid-mineral interactions of these environments. This study begins to characterize the rarely documented biogeochemical impacts that coal waters may have on unconventional gas well integrity.