91快色

Oct. 17, 2014

Appointment launches new era in energy research at 91快色

Schulich School of Engineering鈥檚 Steven Bryant to lead campus team of researchers exploring nanoscience solutions
Steven Bryant will lead and co-ordinate nanotechnology and materials science research at the 91快色, and the integrated team of researchers from across campus who will aim to drastically change how the oilsands are developed. Photo by Riley Brandt, 91快色
Steven Bryant will lead and co-ordinate nanotechnology and materials science research at the Univers

The greatest energy challenge of the 21st century is to meet energy demand from available fuels while drastically reducing society鈥檚 environmental footprint.

The challenge is massive. The solution, according to Steven Bryant, may be miniscule.

Bryant will lead and co-ordinate nanotechnology and materials science research at the 91快色, and the integrated team of researchers from across campus who will aim to drastically change how the oilsands are developed.

The world-leading researcher comes to the 91快色 as the Canada Excellence Research Chair (CERC) in Materials Engineering for Unconventional Oil Reservoirs. He is the university鈥檚 first CERC and came here after the university was granted a so-called 鈥渉unting licence鈥 to scour the globe for an energy researcher who would complete an already robust team of heavy oil and oilsands researchers.

Bryant says Alberta鈥檚 oilsands are a key resource for meeting the world鈥檚 energy demands and the status quo is not acceptable.

鈥淭here is a huge desire to extract this energy resource with less environmental impact and, we think, conceivably even zero-impact, because of some of the cool things that are becoming possible with nanotechnology,鈥 says Bryant.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 kind of blue-sky but that鈥檚 one of the things we will be trying to sow the seeds for 鈥 alternative ways to get the energy out of this resource altogether. It鈥檚 a chance to do things better than we are currently doing them because of rapid advances in mesoscience.鈥

Bryant in the lab.

Bryant in the lab.

The science of very small things

Mesoscience 鈥 technology developed at smaller than 100 nanometres 鈥 offers many tantalizing options to increase the efficiency of in-situ oilsands development, or Steam-Assisted Gravity drainage (SAGD). SAGD is the extraction process in which producers drill horizontal wells beneath the surface to pump steam into the underground oilsands reservoirs to loosen the oil and pump it to the surface.

SAGD is the method currently used to pump nearly one million barrels per day in Alberta and the output is forecast to double by 2022. SAGD uses considerable volumes of water and requires energy to heat the water to produce the steam that softens the underground oil that is caked in sand.

By using nanotechnology, Bryant and his team are working on reducing the amount of energy needed to heat water to create steam while also making the underground heat source more efficient at gathering more oil.

"The holy grail for the last 30 years has been trying to get CO2 to be less viscous. If you can do that, then you can get it to contact a lot more of the oil and for the same amount of CO2, you get a lot more oil produced. That turned out to be hard to do because there aren鈥檛 many chemical ways to make CO2 more viscous,鈥 says Bryant.

By employing innovative approaches now, industry, environment and consumers can benefit greatly in the not-too-distant future.

鈥淭hese alternative ways to get the energy out are at least 10 years away. So it鈥檚 not going to happen tomorrow, but it鈥檚 worth thinking about now to try to see what might be possible,鈥 says Bryant.

The audience at a campus reception on Thursday applauds as Steven Bryant is announced as the 91快色's first Canada Excellence Research Chair in Materials Engineering for Unconventional Oil Reservoirs.

Steven Bryant is announced as the 91快色's first Canada Excellence Research Chair.

Riley Brandt, 91快色

A move to Canada鈥檚 energy epicenter

Bryant is looking forward to working in Canada鈥檚 energy hub and says he will also work with industry to tackle oil production issues.

Industry wants to be more efficient at extracting oil because it saves them money. Efficiency also means reducing the environmental footprint. He believes oil companies will welcome the research produced from the university and said 91快色 is the ideal place to be world leaders in energy production and energy research.

鈥淭he university is close to where the action is. All the major operators are in town and there鈥檚 a chance to take things from the lab to the field. The 91快色 is very well situated in that regard.鈥

Bryant is joining the Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering in the Schulich School of Engineering. Before accepting this position, he was at the University of Texas at Austin, as Bank of America Centennial Professor in the Department of Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering, and directed the Geological CO2 Storage Joint Industry Project and the Nanoparticles for Subsurface Engineering Industrial Affiliates Program.

Bryant pioneered the fields of digital petrophysics and nanoparticles for engineering applications, and has made some of the most significant advances in the past 20 years in porous media modeling, reactive transport theory and CO2 sequestration. Bryant has been published more than 280 times in books, book chapters, peer-reviewed journals and conference proceedings on applications in production engineering, reservoir engineering and formation evaluation. Over his career, Bryant has led major research initiatives involving industry partnerships and trained over 90 graduate students and postdoctoral fellows who found positions in several of the largest energy companies and national laboratories.

He looks forward to what happens next.

鈥淭here鈥檚 still a lot of cool, basic science to be done, but we鈥檒l be doing it with an eye to making a difference in terms of how you get energy out of the oilsands. This won鈥檛 be business as usual.鈥