Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Penn State Home
Help & FAQ
Link opens in a new tab
Search content at Penn State
Home
Researchers
Research output
Research units
Equipment
Grants & Projects
Prizes
Activities
Trace metal source terms in carbon sequestration environments
Athanasios K. Karamalidis
, Sharon G. Torres
, J. Alexandra Hakala
, Hongbo Shao
, Kirk J. Cantrell
, Susan Carroll
John and Willie Leone Department of Energy & Mineral Engineering (EME)
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
55
Link opens in a new tab
Scopus citations
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Trace metal source terms in carbon sequestration environments'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Trace Metals
100%
Carbon Sequestration
100%
Source Term
100%
Metal Sources
100%
Drinking Water
75%
Maximum Contaminant Level
75%
Order of Magnitude
50%
Leakage Path
50%
Geological Formation
50%
Brine
25%
Carbonate
25%
Solution Concentration
25%
Shale
25%
Sandstone
25%
Environmental Impact
25%
Pressure-temperature
25%
Concentration Change
25%
Health Impact
25%
United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA)
25%
Bass
25%
Sequestration
25%
Aquifer
25%
Metal Concentration
25%
Basalt
25%
Groundwater Quality
25%
Drinking Water Standards
25%
Carbonate Reservoir
25%
Relative Significance
25%
Carbon Dioxide Sequestration
25%
Storage Environment
25%
CO2-saturated Brine
25%
Metal Dissolution
25%
In Salah
25%
Sandstone Reservoir
25%
Brine Composition
25%
Storage Sources
25%
Illinois Basin
25%
Evaporites
25%
Trace Metal Release
25%
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Potable Water
100%
Carbon Sequestration
100%
Trace Metal
100%
Carbon Dioxide
75%
Trace Element
50%
Sandstone
50%
Environmental Protection Agency
25%
United States of America
25%
Evaporite
25%
Illinois
25%
Basalt
25%
Groundwater
25%
Cap Rock
25%
Chemical Engineering
Carbon Dioxide
100%
Potable Water
100%
Trace Element
50%
Groundwater
25%