QICS Paper: Impact and recovery of pH in marine sediments subject to a temporary carbon dioxide leak

A possible effect of a carbon dioxide leak from an industrial sub-sea floor storage facility, utilised for Carbon Capture and Storage, is that escaping carbon dioxide gas will dissolve in sediment pore waters and reduce their pH. To quantify the scale and duration of such an impact, a novel, field scale experiment was conducted, whereby carbon dioxide gas was injected into unconsolidated sub-sea floor sediments for a sustained period of 37 days. During this time pore water pH in shallow sediment (5 mm depth) above the leak dropped >0.8 unit, relative to a reference zone that was unaffected by the carbon dioxide. After the gas release was stopped, the pore water pH returned to normal background values within a three-week recovery period. Further, the total mass of carbon dioxide dissolved within the sediment pore fluids above the release zone was modelled by the difference in DIC between the reference and release zones. Results showed that between 14 and 63% of the carbon dioxide released during the experiment could remain in the dissolved phase within the sediment pore water. This is a publication in QICS Special Issue - International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control, Peter Taylor et. al. Doi:10.1016/j.ijggc.2014.09.006.
Nenalezeno https://resources.bgs.ac.uk/images/geonetworkThumbs/1711c01e-1491-2f57-e054-002128a47908.png
non geographic dataset
: http://data.bgs.ac.uk/id/dataHolding/13606642
English
Geoscientific information
GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0: BGS Thesaurus of Geosciences:
Carbon capture and storage
UKCCS
NGDC Deposited Data
Free:
NERC_DDC
publication: 2014-10-01
after - before
Scottish Association for Marine Science
Peter Taylor
, United Kingdom
email: not available
Role: point of contact
Scottish Association for Marine Science
Peter Taylor
, United Kingdom
email: not available
Role: principal investigator

Data Quality

See the journal publication for details
INSPIRE Implementing rules laying down technical arrangements for the interoperability and harmonisation of Geology
Commission Regulation (EU) No 1089/2010 of 23 November 2010 implementing Directive 2007/2/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards interoperability of spatial data sets and services

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Metadata about metadata

1711c01e-1491-2f57-e054-002128a47908
British Geological Survey
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tel: +44 131 667 1000
email: enquiries@bgs.ac.uk
Role: point of contact
2024-04-24

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