Currently working on a water management project for a gas field and our project partner is asking about the possibility of salt precipitations in the
underground.
How do I calculate the solubility of salts in water under low T, high p conditions and (especially) in the presence of known concentrations of other
salts?
In other words: How do I find out about NaCl solubility in water at 3000 m depth and 100 bar when there are already BaSO4, KCl and others contained in
this water?
Kind regards
SebastianEddygp - 6-2-2017 at 07:50
I'm pretty sure there will be no barium sulphate.
Either way this is just a bit of spoonfeeding - it literally is everywhere out there. Tried wiki?Metacelsus - 6-2-2017 at 20:59
I doubt that solubility of most non-gaseous solutes varies appreciably with pressure over the range 1-100 bar. Therefore, you can just focus on
temperature effects.DraconicAcid - 7-2-2017 at 00:11
I doubt that solubility of most non-gaseous solutes varies appreciably with pressure over the range 1-100 bar. Therefore, you can just focus on
temperature effects.
The pressure may not matter, but high concentrations of other solutes will.