%0 Journal Article %@ 21900558 %A Samara, H. %A Ostrowski, T.V. %A Abdulkareem, F.A. %A Padmanabhan, E. %A Jaeger, P. %D 2022 %F scholars:17062 %I Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH %J Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology %K Calcite; Carbon dioxide; Contact angle; Energy resources; Gas adsorption; Wetting, Carbon dioxide adsorption; Carbon storage; Condition; Formation fluids; Global climates; Innovative method; Oil recoveries; Property; Rock pore; Unconventional reservoirs, Diffusion %N 3 %P 811-823 %R 10.1007/s13202-021-01333-9 %T Carbon dioxide adsorption and interaction with formation fluids of Jordanian unconventional reservoirs %U https://khub.utp.edu.my/scholars/17062/ %V 12 %X Shales are mostly unexploited energy resources. However, the extraction and production of their hydrocarbons require innovative methods. Applications involving carbon dioxide in shales could combine its potential use in oil recovery with its storage in view of its impact on global climate. The success of these approaches highly depends on various mechanisms taking place in the rock pores simultaneously. In this work, properties governing these mechanisms are presented at technically relevant conditions. The pendant and sessile drop methods are utilized to measure interfacial tension and wettability, respectively. The gravimetric method is used to quantify CO2 adsorption capacity of shale and gas adsorption kinetics is evaluated to determine diffusion coefficients. It is found that interfacial properties are strongly affected by the operating pressure. The oil-CO2 interfacial tension shows a decrease from approx. 21 mN/m at 0.1 MPa to around 3 mN/m at 20 MPa. A similar trend is observed in brine-CO2 systems. The diffusion coefficient is observed to slightly increase with pressure at supercritical conditions. Finally, the contact angle is found to be directly related to the gas adsorption at the rock surface: Up to 3.8 wt of CO2 is adsorbed on the shale surface at 20 MPa and 60 °C where a maximum in contact angle is also found. To the best of the author�s knowledge, the affinity of calcite-rich surfaces toward CO2 adsorption is linked experimentally to the wetting behavior for the first time. The results are discussed in terms of CO2 storage scenarios occurring optimally at 20 MPa. © 2021, The Author(s). %Z cited By 5