May 5, 2024
Abolfazl Dehghan Monfarad

Abolfazl Dehghan Monfarad

Academic Rank: Assistant professor
Address:
Degree: Ph.D in Petroleum Engineering
Phone: 07731222600
Faculty: Faculty of Petroleum, Gas and Petrochemical Engineering

Research

Title Rigorous hybrid machine learning approaches for interfacial tension modeling in brine-hydrogen/cushion gas systems: Implication for hydrogen geo-storage in the presence of cushion gas
Type Article
Keywords
Hydrogen storage, Cushion gas, Interfacial tension, Artificial intelligence, Renewable energy
Journal Journal of Energy Storage
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.est.2023.108995
Researchers Mohammad Behnam nia (First researcher) , Negin Mozaffari (Second researcher) , Abolfazl Dehghan Monfarad (Third researcher)

Abstract

In light of the environmental consequences linked to the burning of fossil fuels, there is a mounting push to devise cleaner means of energy generation. The production of hydrogen is gaining momentum as a favored avenue for enabling the shift toward sustainable energy. Effective hydrogen storage is crucial for sustainable energy solutions, and the inclusion of cushion gas in geological storage could aid in maintaining formation pressure during hydrogen reproduction while expanding pore volumes for gas by preventing water presence in pores. Accurately controlling hydrogen behavior and interactions in porous media is crucial for successful storage, with interfacial tension between gas and water playing a significant role in the trapping and mobilizing the phases. Thus, developing a predictive tool to simulate interfacial tension measurements is essential. This study employs various intelligent modeling techniques, including Adaptive Neuro-Fuzzy Inference System, Multilayer Perceptron optimized with Bayesian Regularization, Levenberg-Marquardt, and Scaled Conjugate Gradient algorithm, Grey Wolf Optimizer-based Least Squares Boosting (GWO-LSBOOST), GWO-based Radial Basis Function, GWO-based Least Squares Support Vector Machine, and Extreme Learning Machine (ELM), to develop interfacial tension models for brine-hydrogen/cushion gas systems. Applying these models developed based on diverse theories, structures, and performance characteristics helps identify the optimal predictor for the target parameter. The evaluation of the models was carried out using 2868 experimental data points. The achieved results demonstrated the satisfactory performance of different modeling techniques (with R2 falling within the range of 0.8979 to 0.9960), however, GWO-LSBOOST outperformed others (improving R2 from 0.8979 to 0.9960 and AARE% from 5.5714 % to 0.8060 %, compared to ELM). Leverage outlier identification and trend estimation analysis confirmed the statistical reliability of the dat