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1.
Most clastic reservoirs display an intermediate type of wettability. Intermediate wettability covers several local wetting configurations like fractional wet and mixed-wet where the oil-wet sites could either be in the large or smaller pores. Clastic reservoirs show a large variation in fluid flow properties. A classical invasion–percolation network simulator is used to investigate properties of different intermediate wet situations. Variation in wetting properties like contact angles, process dependent contact angles, contact angle distribution, and fraction of oil wet sites are investigated. The fluid flow properties analysed in particular are residual oil saturation and normalized endpoint relative permeability. Results from network modelling have been compared to reservoir core analysis data. The network models applied are at the capillary limit, while the core flood results are clearly viscous influenced. Even though network modelling does not cover all the physics involved in fluid displacement processes, results show that data from simulations are sufficient to present trends in fluid flow properties which are comparable to experimental data.  相似文献   

2.
We use a three-dimensional mixed-wet random network model representing Berea sandstone to compute displacement paths and relative permeabilities for water alternating gas (WAG) flooding. First we reproduce cycles of water and gas injection observed in previously published experimental studies. We predict the measured oil, water and gas relative permeabilities accurately. We discuss the hysteresis trends in the water and gas relative permeabilities and compare the behavior of water-wet and oil-wet media. We interpret the results in terms of pore-scale displacements. In water-wet media the water relative permeability is lower during water injection in the presence of gas due to an increase in oil/water capillary pressure that causes a decrease in wetting layer conductance. The gas relative permeability is higher for displacement cycles after first gas injection at high gas saturation due to cooperative pore filling, but lower at low saturation due to trapping. In oil-wet media, the water relative permeability remains low until water-filled elements span the system at which point the relative permeability increases rapidly. The gas relative permeability is lower in the presence of water than oil because it is no longer the most non-wetting phase.  相似文献   

3.

Three-phase flow in porous media is encountered in many applications including subsurface carbon dioxide storage, enhanced oil recovery, groundwater remediation and the design of microfluidic devices. However, the pore-scale physics that controls three-phase flow under capillary dominated conditions is still not fully understood. Recent advances in three-dimensional pore-scale imaging have provided new insights into three-phase flow. Based on these findings, this paper describes the key pore-scale processes that control flow and trapping in a three-phase system, namely wettability order, spreading and wetting layers, and double/multiple displacement events. We show that in a porous medium containing water, oil and gas, the behaviour is controlled by wettability, which can either be water-wet, weakly oil-wet or strongly oil-wet, and by gas–oil miscibility. We provide evidence that, for the same wettability state, the three-phase pore-scale events are different under near-miscible conditions—where the gas–oil interfacial tension is ≤?1 mN/m—compared to immiscible conditions. In a water-wet system, at immiscible conditions, water is the most-wetting phase residing in the corners of the pore space, gas is the most non-wetting phase occupying the centres, while oil is the intermediate-wet phase spreading in layers sandwiched between water and gas. This fluid configuration allows for double capillary trapping, which can result in more gas trapping than for two-phase flow. At near-miscible conditions, oil and gas appear to become neutrally wetting to each other, preventing oil from spreading in layers; instead, gas and oil compete to occupy the centre of the larger pores, while water remains connected in wetting layers in the corners. This allows for the rapid production of oil since it is no longer confined to movement in thin layers. In a weakly oil-wet system, at immiscible conditions, the wettability order is oil–water–gas, from most to least wetting, promoting capillary trapping of gas in the pore centres by oil and water during water-alternating-gas injection. This wettability order is altered under near-miscible conditions as gas becomes the intermediate-wet phase, spreading in layers between water in the centres and oil in the corners. This fluid configuration allows for a high oil recovery factor while restricting gas flow in the reservoir. Moreover, we show evidence of the predicted, but hitherto not reported, wettability order in strongly oil-wet systems at immiscible conditions, oil–gas–water, from most to least wetting. At these conditions, gas progresses through the pore space in disconnected clusters by double and multiple displacements; therefore, the injection of large amounts of water to disconnect the gas phase is unnecessary. We place the analysis in a practical context by discussing implications for carbon dioxide storage combined with enhanced oil recovery before suggesting topics for future work.

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4.
Pore-network modelling is commonly used to predict capillary pressure and relative permeability functions for multi-phase flow simulations. These functions strongly depend on the presence of fluid films and layers in pore corners. Recently, van Dijke and Sorbie (J. Coll. Int. Sci. 293:455–463, 2006) obtained the new thermodynamically derived criterion for oil layers existence in the pore corners with non-uniform wettability caused by ageing. This criterion is consistent with the thermodynamically derived capillary entry pressures for other water invasion displacements and it is more restrictive than the previously used geometrical layer collapse criterion. The thermodynamic criterion has been included in a newly developed two-phase flow pore network model, as well as two versions of the geometrical criterion. The network model takes as input networks extracted from pore space reconstruction methods or CT images. Furthermore, a new n-cornered star shape characterization technique has been implemented, based on shape factor and dimensionless hydraulic radius as input parameters. For two unstructured networks, derived from a Berea sandstone sample, oil residuals have been estimated for different wettability scenarios, by varying the contact angles in oil-filled pores after ageing from weakly to strongly oil-wet. Simulation of primary drainage, ageing and water invasion show that the thermodynamical oil layer existence criterion gives more realistic oil residual saturations compared to the geometrical criteria. Additionally, a sensitivity analysis has been carried out of oil residuals with respect to end-point capillary pressures. For strongly oil-wet cases residuals increase strongly with increasing end-point capillary pressures, contrary to intermediate oil-wet cases.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, the main recovery mechanisms behind oil/water/gas interactions during the water-alternating-gas (WAG) injection process, in a network of matrix/fracture, were fundamentally investigated. A visual micromodel was utilized to provide insights into the potential applications of WAG process in fractured oil-wet media as well as the possibility of observing microscopic displacement behavior of fluids in the model. The model was made of an oil-wet facture/matrix network system, comprised of four matrix blocks surrounded with fractures. Different WAG injection scenarios, such as slug arrangements and the effects of fluid injection rates on oil recovery were studied. A new equation representing the capillary number, considering the fracture viscous force and matrix capillary force, was developed to make the experimental results more similar to a real field. In general, WAG tests performed in the fractured model showed a higher oil recovery factor compared with the results of gas and water injection tests at their optimum rates. The results showed that the presence of an oil film, in all cases, was the main reason for co-current drainage and double displacement of oil under applied driving forces. Furthermore, the formation of oil liquid bridges improved the recovery efficiency, which was greatly influenced by the size of fracture connecting the two matrix blocks; these connecting paths were more stable when there was initial water remaining in the media. Analyzing different recovery curves and microscopic view of the three phases in the transparent model showed that starting an injection mode with gas (followed by repeated small slugs of water and gas), could considerably improve oil recovery by pushing water into the matrix zone and increasing the total sweep efficiency.  相似文献   

6.
Displacement of a viscous fluid by a lower viscosity immiscible fluid (such as waterflood of a viscous oil) in a porous medium is unstable. The displacement front generates viscous fingers which lead to low oil recovery efficiency. These fingers are much smaller in width than typical reservoir simulation grid blocks, and capturing their effect in reservoir simulation is important. A dimensionless scaling group (viscous finger number) had been suggested in the past, which has a power-law relationship with the breakthrough recovery and cumulative recovery in unstable core floods. The relative permeability used in large grid block simulations had been modified to so-called pseudo-relative permeability on the basis of the dimensionless group, thus incorporating the effect of fingers in waterflood predictions. However, the previous proposed models were constructed from experiments in only water-wet rocks. This paper extends the recent viscous fingering models to oil-wet systems. Sandstone cores were treated to alter the wettability to oil-wet. Adverse viscosity water floods were performed in oil-wet cores. Viscosity ratio, velocity and diameter were varied. It is shown that the previously developed viscous finger number does not work for the oil-wet experiments. The correlating dimensionless number is modified for oil-wet systems; it is also different from the dimensionless group identified by Peters and Flock (Soc Petroleum Eng, 1981. doi: 10.2118/8371-PA) for oil-wet cores. A pseudo-relative permeability model has been developed for oil-wet cores. Corefloods have been matched by the new pseudo-relative permeability model to determine the model parameters. This pseudo-relative permeability model can be used in reservoir simulations of water and polymer floods in viscous oil-wet reservoirs.  相似文献   

7.
Quasi-static rule-based network models used to calculate capillary dominated multi-phase transport properties in porous media employ equilibrium fluid saturation distributions which assume that pores are fully filled with a single bulk fluid with other fluids present only as wetting and/or spreading films. We show that for drainage dominated three-phase displacements in which a non-wetting fluid (gas) displaces a trapped intermediate fluid (residual oil) in the presence of a mobile wetting fluid (water) this assumption distorts the dynamics of three-phase displacements and results in significant volume errors for the intermediate fluid and erroneous calculations of intermediate fluid residual saturations, relative permeabilities and recoveries. The volume errors are associated with the double drainage mechanism which is responsible for the mobilization of waterflood residual oil. A simple modification of the double drainage mechanism is proposed which allows the presence of a relatively small number of partially filled pores and removes the oil volume errors.  相似文献   

8.
9.
We use the model described in Zolfaghari and Piri (Transp Porous Media, 2016) to predict two- and three-phase relative permeabilities and residual saturations for different saturation histories. The results are rigorously validated against their experimentally measured counterparts available in the literature. We show the relevance of thermodynamically consistent threshold capillary pressures and presence of oil cusps for significantly improving the predictive capabilities of the model at low oil saturations. We study systems with wetting and spreading oil layers and cusps. Three independent experimental data sets representing different rock samples and fluid systems are investigated in this work. Different disordered networks are used to represent the pore spaces in which different sets of experiments were performed, i.e., Berea, Bentheimer, and reservoir sandstones. All three-phase equilibrium interfacial tensions used for the simulation of three-phase experimental data are measured and used in the model’s validation. We use a fixed set of parameters, i.e., the input network (to represent the pore space) and contact angles (to represent the wettability state), for all experiments belonging to a data set. Incorporation of the MSP method for capillary pressure calculations and cusp analysis significantly improves the agreement between the model’s predictions of relative permeabilities and residual oil saturations with experimental data.  相似文献   

10.
The impact of fractional wettability on the production characteristics of a VAPEX process at the macroscale was investigated. Conventional VAPEX experiments were conducted in a 220 Darcy random packing of glass beads in a rectangular physical model and n-pentane was used to recover the Cold Lake bitumen from the oil-saturated model in the absence of connate water. The composition of oil-wet beads in the packed bed was altered from completely water-wet beads to completely oil-wet beads at different proportions of oil-wet beads mixed with water-wet beads. A substantial increase (about 40%) in the production rate of live oil was observed during the VAPEX process when the wettability of the porous packing was entirely oil-wet beads. A critical oil-wet fraction of 0.66 was found for the heterogeneous packing of water-wet and oil-wet beads of similar size distribution. Above this critical composition, the live oil production rate was not affected by further increase in the proportion of the oil-wet beads. It is believed that above this critical composition of the oil-wet beads, the crevice flow process is dominated by the continuity of higher conductivity live oil films between particles through the oil-wet regions. Below this critical composition, the live oil production rate increased linearly with the fraction of the oil-wet beads in the packing. The oil-wet regions favor the live oil drainage compared to that of the water-wet regions as they enhance the rate of imbibition of the live oil from the oil-filled pores to the vacated pores near the nominal VAPEX interface. These two factors enhance the live oil production rate during the VAPEX process. The solvent content of the live oil, the solvent-to-oil ratio (SOR), and the residual oil saturation did not correlate strongly with the proportion of the oil-wet beads in the packing. The average solvent content of the live oil and the residual oil saturation were measured to be 48% by weight and 7% by volume respectively.  相似文献   

11.

We predict waterflood displacement on a pore-by-pore basis using pore network modelling. The pore structure is captured by a high-resolution image. We then use an energy balance applied to images of the displacement to assign an average contact angle, and then modify the local pore-scale contact angles in the model about this mean to match the observed displacement sequence. Two waterflooding experiments on oil-wet rocks are analysed where the displacement sequence was imaged using time-resolved synchrotron imaging. In both cases the capillary pressure in the model matches the experimentally obtained values derived from the measured interfacial curvature. We then predict relative permeability for the full saturation range. Using the optimised contact angles distributed randomly in space has little effect on the predicted capillary pressures and relative permeabilities, indicating that spatial correlation in wettability is not significant in these oil-wet samples. The calibrated model can be used to predict properties outside the range of conditions considered in the experiment.

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12.
We present a pore-scale network model of two- and three-phase flow in disordered porous media. The model reads three-dimensional pore networks representing the pore space in different porous materials. It simulates wide range of two- and three-phase pore-scale displacements in porous media with mixed-wet wettability. The networks are composed of pores and throats with circular and angular cross sections. The model allows the presence of multiple phases in each angular pore. It uses Helmholtz free energy balance and Mayer–Stowe–Princen (MSP) method to compute threshold capillary pressures for two- and three-phase displacements (fluid configuration changes) based on pore wettability, pore geometry, interfacial tension, and initial pore fluid occupancy. In particular, it generates thermodynamically consistent threshold capillary pressures for wetting and spreading fluid layers resulting from different displacement events. Threshold capillary pressure equations are presented for various possible fluid configuration changes. By solving the equations for the most favorable displacements, we show how threshold capillary pressures and final fluid configurations may vary with wettability, shape factor, and the maximum capillary pressure reached during preceding displacement processes. A new cusp pore fluid configuration is introduced to handle the connectivity of the intermediate wetting phase at low saturations and to improve model’s predictive capabilities. Based on energy balance and geometric equations, we show that, for instance, a gas-to-oil piston-like displacement in an angular pore can result in a pore fluid configuration with no oil, with oil layers, or with oil cusps. Oil layers can then collapse to form cusps. Cusps can shrink and disappear leaving no oil behind. Different displacement mechanisms for layer and cusp formation and collapse based on the MSP analysis are implemented in the model. We introduce four different layer collapse rules. A selected collapse rule may generate different corner configuration depending on fluid occupancies of the neighboring elements and capillary pressures. A new methodology based on the MSP method is introduced to handle newly created gas/water interfaces that eliminates inconsistencies in relation between capillary pressures and pore fluid occupancies. Minimization of Helmholtz free energy for each relevant displacement enables the model to accurately determine the most favorable displacement, and hence, improve its predictive capabilities for relative permeabilities, capillary pressures, and residual saturations. The results indicate that absence of oil cusps and the previously used geometric criterion for the collapse of oil layers could yield lower residual oil saturations than the experimentally measured values in two- and three-phase systems.  相似文献   

13.
In this paper, we analyze an empirical model of viscous fingering for three-component, two-phase, first-contact miscible flows. We present the complete range of analytical solutions to secondary and tertiary water-alternating-gas (WAG) floods. An important ingredient in the construction of analytical solutions is the presence of detached (nonlocal) branches of the Hugoniot locus, that is, curves in composition space that satisfy the Rankine–Hugoniot conditions but do not contain the reference state. We illustrate how, in water–solvent floods into a medium with mobile water and residual oil (immobile to water), the solvent front and the water Buckley–Leverett front may interact, resulting in a leading water/solvent shock that is stable to viscous fingering. The analytical solutions explain why in these miscible tertiary floods, oil and solvent often break through simultaneously. We discuss the implications of the new solutions in the design of miscible tertiary floods, such as the estimation of the optimum WAG ratio.  相似文献   

14.
In the limit of zero capillary pressure, solutions to the equations governing three-phase flow, obtained using common empirical relative permeability models, exhibit complex wavespeeds for certain saturation values (elliptic regions) that result in unstable and non-unique solutions. We analyze a simple but physically realizable pore-scale model: a bundle of cylindrical capillary tubes, to investigate whether the presence of these elliptic regions is an artifact of using unphysical relative permeabilities. Without gravity, the model does not yield elliptic regions unless the most non-wetting phase is the most viscous and the most wetting phase is the least viscous. With gravity, the model yields elliptic regions for any combination of viscosities, and these regions occupy a significant fraction of the saturation space. We then present converged, stable numerical solutions for one-dimensional flow, which include capillary pressure. These demonstrate that, even when capillary forces are small relative to viscous forces, they have a significant effect on solutions which cross or enter the elliptic region. We conclude that elliptic regions can occur for a physically realizable model of a porous medium, and that capillary pressure should be included explicitly in three-phase numerical simulators to obtain stable, physically meaningful solutions which reproduce the correct sequence of saturation changes.  相似文献   

15.
In this work, we investigate the impact of mobility changes due to flow reversals from co-current to counter-current flow on the displacement performance of water alternating gas (WAG) injection processes. In WAG processes, the injected gas will migrate toward the top of the formation while the injected water will migrate toward the bottom of the formation. The segregation of gas, oil and water phases will result in counter-current flow occurring in the vertical direction in some portions of the reservoir during the displacement process. Previous experimental and theoretical studies of counter-current flow have shown that the relative mobility of each of the phases in a porous medium is considerably less when counter-current flow prevails as compared to co-current flow settings. A reduction of the relative permeability in the vertical direction results in a dynamic anisotropy in phase mobilities. This effect has, to the best of our knowledge, not previously been considered in the modeling and simulation of WAG processes. A new flow model that accounts for flow reversals in the vertical direction has been implemented and tested in a three-phase compositional reservoir simulator. In order to investigate the impact of flow reversals, results from the new flow model are compared to cases where counter-current flow effects on the phase mobilities are ignored. A range of displacement settings, covering relevant slug sizes, have been investigated to gauge the impact of mobility reductions due to flow reversals. Significant differences, in terms of saturation distribution, producing GOR and oil recovery, are observed between the conventional flow model (ignoring mobility reductions due to counter-current flow) and the proposed new model that accounts for reductions in phase mobility during counter-current flow. Accordingly, we recommend that an explicit representation of flow transitions between co-current and counter-current flow (and the related impact on phase mobilities) should be considered to ensure accurate and optimal design of WAG injection processes.  相似文献   

16.
The Effect of Wettability on Three-Phase Relative Permeability   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We study three-phase flow in water-wet, oil-wet, and fractionally-wet sandpacks. We use CT scanning to measure directly the oil and water relative permeabilites for three-phase gravity drainage. In an analogue experiment, we measure pressure gradients in the gas phase to determine the gas relative permeability. Thus we find all three relative permeabilities as a function of saturation. We find that the gas relative permeability is approximately half as much in a oil-wet medium than in an water-wet medium at the same gas saturation. The water relative permeability in the water-wet medium and the oil relative permeability in the oil-wet medium are similar. In the water-wet medium the oil relative permeability scales as k roS o 4 for S o>S or, where S or is the waterflood residual oil saturation. With octane as the oil phase, k roS o 2 for S o<S or, while with decane as the oil phase, k ro falls sharply for S o<S or. The water relative permeability in the oil-wet medium resembles the oil relative permeability in the water-wet medium for a non-spreading oil such as decane. These observations can be explained in terms of wetting, spreading, and the pore scale configurations of fluid.  相似文献   

17.
A network model is established through the techniques of image reconstruction, a thinning algorithm, and pore–throat information extraction with the aid of an industrial microfocus CT scanning system. In order to characterize actual rock pore–throat structure, the established model is modified according to the matching of experimental factors such as porosity, permeability, and the relative permeability curve. On this basis, the impacts of wetting angle, pore radius, shape factor, pore–throat ratio, and coordination number as applied to microscopic remaining oil distribution after water flooding are discussed. For a partially wetting condition, the displacement result of a water-wet pore is somewhat better than that of an oil-wet pore as a whole, and the possibility of any remaining oil is relatively low. Taking the comprehensive effects of various factors into account, a prediction method of remaining oil distribution is presented through the use of fuzzy comprehensive evaluation. It is seen that this method can predict whether there is remaining oil or not in the pore space with satisfactory accuracy, which is above 75%. This method thus provides guidance for a better understanding of the microscopic causes of the remaining oil.  相似文献   

18.
Drainage displacements in three-phase flow under strongly wetting conditions are completely described by a simple generalisation of well understood two-phase drainage mechanisms. As in two-phase flow, the sequence of throat invasions in three-phase flow is determined by fluid connectivity and threshold capillary pressure for the invading interface. Flow through wetting and intermediate spreading films is important in determining fluid recoveries and the progress of the displacement in three-phase flow. Viscous pressure drops associated with flow through films give rise to multiple filling and emptying of pores. A three-phase, two-dimensional network model based on the pore-scale fluid distributions and displacement mechanisms reported by Øren et al. and which accounts for flow through both wetting and intermediate fluid films is shown to correctly predict all the important characteristics of three-phase flow observed in glass micromodel experiments.  相似文献   

19.
Fractional wettability has been widely recognized in most of the oil reservoirs and it is a crucial factor that controls the fluid flow behavior in porous medium. The overall effect of the proportion of oil-wet grains on the fluid flow properties has been well discussed. However, recent studies found that the random distribution and coordination of oil-wet and water-wet grains could make multi-phase flow behaviors extremely complicated in such media. The multiphase flow mechanisms in fractional wettability media remains unclear. In this study, oil imbibition experiments were systematically conducted using glass cylinders packed with fractional-wet glass beads. To study the effect of fractional wettability on multiple-phase flow properties, samples with different oil-wet grain proportions were prepared, and fifteen repeated experiments were conducted for each oil-wet proportion. The experimental results showed that oil imbibition was largely dependent on but not strictly a function of the proportion of oil-wet grains in the medium. The imbibition behaviors of samples with the same fractional proportion could vary significantly, as some samples exhibited complete oil migration, while others did not. This probabilistic phenomenon is likely due to the random distribution of oil-wet and water-wet grains. A pore throat may behave as oil-wet or water-wet depending on the relative proportion of oil-wet grains the pore throat contains. When the grains that comprise the pore throat are dominated by oil-wet grains, the throat behaves as oil-wet, and vice versa. Only when these oil-wet pore throats are connected to form a complete oil-wet pathway throughout the medium can the oil continuously imbibe into the medium. Therefore, the extent of oil imbibition depends on the completeness of the oil-wet pathway, which is controlled by the proportion of oil-wet grains in the medium. The higher the proportion of oil-wet grains in the medium, the larger the number of oil-wet pore throats that can form; thus, the higher the possibility that those oil-wet pore throats can connect to form continuous oil-wet pathways.  相似文献   

20.
A parametric two-phase, oil–water relative permeability/capillary pressure model for petroleum engineering and environmental applications is developed for porous media in which the smaller pores are strongly water-wet and the larger pores tend to be intermediate- or oil-wet. A saturation index, which can vary from 0 to 1, is used to distinguish those pores that are strongly water-wet from those that have intermediate- or oil-wet characteristics. The capillary pressure submodel is capable of describing main-drainage and hysteretic saturation-path saturations for positive and negative oil–water capillary pressures. At high oil–water capillary pressures, an asymptote is approached as the water saturation approaches the residual water saturation. At low oil–water capillary pressures (i.e. negative), another asymptote is approached as the oil saturation approaches the residual oil saturation. Hysteresis in capillary pressure relations, including water entrapment, is modeled. Relative permeabilities are predicted using parameters that describe main-drainage capillary pressure relations and accounting for how water and oil are distributed throughout the pore spaces of a porous medium with mixed wettability. The capillary pressure submodel is tested against published experimental data, and an example of how to use the relative permeability/capillary pressure model for a hypothetical saturation-path scenario involving several imbibition and drainage paths is given. Features of the model are also explained. Results suggest that the proposed model is capable of predicting relative permeability/capillary pressure characteristics of porous media mixed wettability.  相似文献   

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