Energies (Jan 2021)

Adaptive Surrogate Estimation with Spatial Features Using a Deep Convolutional Autoencoder for CO<sub>2</sub> Geological Sequestration

  • Suryeom Jo,
  • Changhyup Park,
  • Dong-Woo Ryu,
  • Seongin Ahn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/en14020413
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 2
p. 413

Abstract

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This paper develops a reliable deep-learning framework to extract latent features from spatial properties and investigates adaptive surrogate estimation to sequester CO2 into heterogeneous deep saline aquifers. Our deep-learning architecture includes a deep convolutional autoencoder (DCAE) and a fully-convolutional network to not only reduce computational costs but also to extract dimensionality-reduced features to conserve spatial characteristics. The workflow integrates two different spatial properties within a single convolutional system, and it also achieves accurate reconstruction performance. This approach significantly reduces the number of parameters to 4.3% of the original number required, e.g., the number of three-dimensional spatial properties needed decreases from 44,460 to 1920. The successful dimensionality reduction is accomplished by the DCAE system regarding all inputs as image channels from the initial stage of learning using the fully-convolutional network instead of fully-connected layers. The DCAE reconstructs spatial parameters such as permeability and porosity while conserving their statistical values, i.e., their mean and standard deviation, achieving R-squared values of over 0.972 with a mean absolute percentage error of their mean values of less than 1.79%. The adaptive surrogate model using the latent features extracted by DCAE, well operations, and modeling parameters is able to accurately estimate CO2 sequestration performances. The model shows R-squared values of over 0.892 for testing data not used in training and validation. The DCAE-based surrogate estimation exploits the reliable integration of various spatial data within the fully-convolutional network and allows us to evaluate flow behavior occurring in a subsurface domain.

Keywords