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A comparative analysis of numerical approaches for the description of gas flow in clay-based repository systems: from a laboratory to a large-scale gas injection test

Tamayo-Mas, E.; Harrington, J.F.; Damians, I.P.; Kim, J.T.; Radeisen, E.; Rutqvist, J.; Lee, C.; Noghretab, B.S.; Cuss, R.J.. 2025 A comparative analysis of numerical approaches for the description of gas flow in clay-based repository systems: from a laboratory to a large-scale gas injection test. Geomechanics for Energy and the Environment, 42, 100654. 10.1016/j.gete.2025.100654

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Abstract/Summary

There is nowadays a consensus among many countries that geological disposal is a favourable solution for the long-term management. Although different host formations and different barrier systems are under consideration around the world, clay-based materials form an important component for waste isolation in most national programmes. Hence, a good comprehension of the effect of gas flow on the hydro-mechanical behaviour of clay-based soils is essential, both at laboratory and field scale. Task B under the international cooperative project DECOVALEX-2023 has recently shown that, after some enhancement, models can be employed to reproduce laboratory scale tests, even with different sample geometries37. However, further work is required to understand whether they can be applied to simulate a large-scale experiment. Up-scaling of models for the advective transport of gas through clay-based low permeable material presents a number of problems related to the difficulty in obtaining consistent hydrogeological parameters and constitutive relationships at both laboratory and field scale. Based on a unique dataset from a large-scale gas injection test (Lasgit) performed at the Äspö Hard Rock Laboratory (Sweden), Task B within DECOVALEX-2023 has explored the refinement of these numerical strategies applied to the simulation of gas flow. Work performed within the task reveals that codes do not need to be substantially modified from the laboratory models to reproduce full-scale tests: indeed, model parameters calibrated and validated at laboratory scale have been applied to predict field scale gas flow at Lasgit, including peak gas pressure and injected cumulative gas volume. By means of (1) the introduction of interfaces between blocks to reflect the experimental configuration and the (2) adjustment of some parameters (e.g., higher permeability), the updated models are able to represent most of the key features observed in the experimental data, even at a large scale.

Item Type: Publication - Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI): 10.1016/j.gete.2025.100654
ISSN: 23523808
Date made live: 09 May 2025 10:21 +0 (UTC)
URI: https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/539409

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