首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
In this article, the numerical simulations for one-dimensional three-phase flows in fractured porous media are implemented. The simulation results show that oil displacement in matrix is dominated by oil–water capillary pressure only under certain conditions. When conditions are changed to decrease the amount of water entering into the fractured media from the boundary of the flow field, water in fracture may be vaporized to superheated steam. In these cases, the appearance of superheated steam in fracture rather than in matrix will decrease the fracture pressure and generate the pressure difference between matrix and fracture, which results in oil flowing from matrix to fracture. Assuming that oil is wetting to steam, the matrix steam–oil capillary pressure will decrease the matrix oil-phase pressure as the matrix steam saturation increases. After the steam–oil capillary pressure finally exceeds the pressure difference due to the appearance of superheated steam in fracture, the oil displacement in matrix will stop. It is also shown that variations of the water relative permeability curve in matrix do not result in different mechanisms for oil displacement in matrix. The simulation results suggest that the amount of liquid water supply from the boundary of flow field fundamentally influence the mechanisms for oil displacement in matrix.  相似文献   

2.
The critical and optimum injection rates as well as the critical fracture capillary number for an efficient displacement process are determined based on the experimental and numerical modeling of the displacement of nonwetting phase (oil) by wetting phase (water) in fractured porous media. The efficiency of the process is defined in terms of the nonwetting phase displaced from the system per amount of wetting phase injected and per time. Also, the effects of injection rate on capillary imbibition transfer dominated two-phase flow in fractured porous media are clarified by visualizing the experiments. The results reveal that as the injection rate is increased, fracture pattern begins to become an effective parameter on the matrix saturation distribution. As the rate is lowered, however, the system begins to behave like a homogeneous system showing a frontal displacement regardless the fracture configuration.  相似文献   

3.
Fluid displacement in porous media plays an important role in many industrial applications, including biological filtration, carbon capture and storage, enhanced oil recovery, and fluid transport in fuel cells. The displacement front is unstable, which evolves from smooth into ramified patterns, when the mobility (ratio of permeability to viscosity) of the displacing fluid is larger than that of the displaced one; this phenomenon is called viscous fingering. Viscous fingering increases the residual saturation of the displaced fluid, considerably impairing the efficacy of fluid displacement. It is of practical importance to develop suitable methods to improve fluid displacement. This paper presents an experimental study on applying the discontinuity of capillary pressure to improve immiscible fluid displacement in drainage for which the displacing fluid (air) wets the porous media less preferentially than does the displaced fluid (silicone oil). The concept involves using a heterogeneous packing system, where the upstream region features large pores and small capillary pressure, and the downstream region features small pores and large capillary pressure. The increase in capillary pressure prevents fingering from directly crossing the media interface, thus enhancing the displacement. The experimental apparatus was a linear cell comprising porous media between two parallel plates, and glass beads of 0.6 and 0.125 mm diameter were packed to compose the heterogeneous porous media. The time history of the finger flow was recorded using a video camera. Pressure drops over the model from the inlet to the outlet were measured to compare viscous pressure drops with capillary pressures. The results show that the fluid displacement was increased by the capillary discontinuities. The optimal displacement was determined through linear regression by adjusting the relative length of the large- and small-pore region. The results may assist in the understanding of fingering flow across the boundaries of different grain-sized bands for the gas and oil reservoir management, such as setting the relative location of the injection and production wells. The findings may also serve as a reference for industrial applications such as placing the grain bands in an adequate series to improve the displacement efficacy in biological filtration.  相似文献   

4.

Capillary dominated flow or imbibition—whether spontaneous or forced—is an important physical phenomena in understanding the behavior of naturally fractured water-driven reservoirs (NFR’s). When the water flows through the fractures, it imbibes into the matrix and pushes the oil out of the pores due to the difference in the capillary pressure. In this paper, we focus on modeling and quantifying the oil recovered from NFR’s through the imbibition processes using a novel fully implicit mimetic finite difference (MFD) approach coupled with discrete fracture/discrete matrix (DFDM) technique. The investigation is carried out in the light of different wetting states of the porous media (i.e., varying capillary pressure curves) and a full tensor representation of the permeability. The produced results proved the MFD to be robust in preserving the physics of the problem, and accurately mapping the flow path in the investigated domains. The wetting state of the rock affects greatly the oil recovery factors along with the orientation of the fractures and the principal direction of the permeability tensor. We can conclude that our novel MFD method can handle the fluid flow problems in discrete-fractured reservoirs. Future works will be focused on the extension of MFD method to more complex multi-physics simulations.

  相似文献   

5.
Pore Scale Modeling of Rate Effects in Imbibition   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We use pore scale network modeling to study the effects of flow rate and contact angle on imbibition relative permeabilities. The model accounts for flow in wetting layers that occupy roughness or crevices in the pore space. Viscous forces are accounted for by solving for the wetting phase pressure and assuming a fixed conductance in wetting layers. Three-dimensional simulations model granular media, whereas two-dimensional runs represent fracture flow.We identify five generic types of displacement pattern as we vary capillary number, contact angle, and initial wetting phase saturation: flat frontal advance, dendritic frontal advance, bond percolation, compact cluster growth, and ramified cluster growth. Using phase diagrams we quantify the range of physical properties under which each regime is observed. The work explains apparently inconsistent experimental measurements of relative permeability in granular media and fractures.  相似文献   

6.
This article describes a semi-analytical model for two-phase immiscible flow in porous media. The model incorporates the effect of capillary pressure gradient on fluid displacement. It also includes a correction to the capillarity-free Buckley–Leverett saturation profile for the stabilized-zone around the displacement front and the end-effects near the core outlet. The model is valid for both drainage and imbibition oil–water displacements in porous media with different wettability conditions. A stepwise procedure is presented to derive relative permeabilities from coreflood displacements using the proposed semi-analytical model. The procedure can be utilized for both before and after breakthrough data and hence is capable to generate a continuous relative permeability curve unlike other analytical/semi-analytical approaches. The model predictions are compared with numerical simulations and laboratory experiments. The comparison shows that the model predictions for drainage process agree well with the numerical simulations for different capillary numbers, whereas there is mismatch between the relative permeability derived using the Johnson–Bossler–Naumann (JBN) method and the simulations. The coreflood experiments carried out on a Berea sandstone core suggest that the proposed model works better than the JBN method for a drainage process in strongly wet rocks. Both methods give similar results for imbibition processes.  相似文献   

7.
The ultimate driving force for counter-current spontaneous imbibition of a fluid into a porous material is the capillary pressure developed under dynamic conditions at the imbibition front. This is a difficult variable to measure. We report experiments using restricted counter-current spontaneous imbibition to find the maximum capillary pressure developed during imbibition of a light mineral oil (and brine) into initially air-filled sandstone core samples with one end-face open. The production of air from the core was prevented by covering its open face with a low permeability core segment set against the main test segment. The location of the imbibition front and the pressure resulting from compression of air ahead of the imbibition front were monitored. In some cases, in order to achieve stabilized gas pressures with the front still advancing through the core, the air in the core was compressed at the start of the imbibition test. The subsequently measured stabilized air pressures dropped only slightly as imbibition slowed. The measured pressures are directly related to the effective capillary pressures that drive spontaneous imbibition. After spontaneous imbibition ceased, the pressure was released by flow of air through the sealed end of the core and further spontaneous imbibition occurred in co-current mode. Comparison of the stabilized pressures with previously published oil/brine imbibition results showed close agreement after compensation for the difference in interfacial tension.  相似文献   

8.
The percolation theory approach to static and dynamic properties of the single- and two-phase fluid flow in porous media is described. Using percolation cluster scaling laws, one can obtain functional relations between the saturation fraction of a given phase and the capillary pressure, the relative permeability, and the dispersion coefficient, in drainage and imbibition processes. In addition, the scale dependency of the transport coefficient is shown to be an outcome of the fractal nature of pore space and of the random flow pattern of the fluids or contaminant.  相似文献   

9.
We present results from a systematic study of relative permeability functions derived from two-phase lattice Boltzmann (LB) simulations on X-ray microtomography pore space images of Bentheimer and Berea sandstone. The simulations mimic both unsteady- and steady-state experiments for measuring relative permeability. For steady-state flow, we reproduce drainage and imbibition relative permeability curves that are in good agreement with available experimental steady-state data. Relative permeabilities from unsteady-state displacements are derived by explicit calculations using the Johnson, Bossler and Naumann method with input from simulated production and pressure profiles. We find that the nonwetting phase relative permeability for drainage is over-predicted compared to the steady-state data. This is due to transient dynamic effects causing viscous instabilities. Thus, the calculated unsteady-state relative permeabilities for the drainage is fundamentally different from the steady-state situation where transient effects have vanished. These effects have a larger impact on the invading nonwetting fluid than the defending wetting fluid. Unsteady-state imbibition relative permeabilities are comparable to the steady-state ones. However, the appearance of a piston-like front disguises most of the displacement and data can only be determined for a restricted range of saturations. Relative permeabilities derived from unsteady-state displacements exhibit clear rate effects, and residual saturations depend strongly on the capillary number. We conclude that the LB method can provide a versatile tool to compute multiphase flow properties from pore space images and to explore the effects of imposed flow and fluid conditions on these properties. Also, dynamic effects are properly captured by the method, giving the opportunity to examine differences between steady and unsteady-state setups.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The objective of this work is to evaluate the prediction accuracy of network modeling to calculate transport properties of porous media based on the interpretation of mercury invasion capillary pressure curves only. A pore-scale modeling approach is used to model the multi-phase flow and calculate gas/oil relative permeability curves. The characteristics of the 3-D pore-network are defined with the requirement that the network model satisfactorily reproduces the capillary pressure curve (Pc curve), the porosity and the permeability. A sensitivity study on the effect of the input parameters on the prediction of capillary pressure and gas/oil relative permeability curves is presented. The simulations show that different input parameters can lead to similarly good reproductions of the experimental Pc, although the predicted relative permeabilities Kr are somewhat widespread. This means that the information derived from a mercury invasion Pc curve is not sufficient to characterize transport properties of a porous medium. The simulations indicate that more quantitative information on the wall roughness and the node/bond aspect ratio would be necessary to better constrain the problem. There is also evidence that in narrow pore size distributions pore body volume and pore throat radius are correlated while in broad pore size distributions they would be uncorrelated.  相似文献   

12.
Different functions describing matrix-fracture transfer were tested for counter-current capillary imbibition interaction. The recovery curves obtained from capillary imbibition experiments were used to fit the transfer functions. The exponential coefficients yielding the best fit to the experimental data were obtained and correlated to the effective parameters such as viscosity, IFT, matrix length and diameter, matrix permeability and porosity, and wettability using multivariable regression analysis. In order to obtain the recovery curves, experiments were conducted on Berea sandstone and Indiana limestone samples. Cylindrical samples with different shape factors were obtained by cutting the plugs 1, 2.5, and 5 cm in diameter and 2.5, 5, and 10 cm in length. All sides were coated with epoxy except one end. More than fifty static imbibition experiments were carried out on vertically and horizontally situated samples where the imbibition took place upward and lateral directions, respectively. Brine–air, brine–kerosene, brine–mineral oil, and surfactant solution–mineral oil pairs were used as fluids. For many matrix shape factors (especially longer and small diameter ones), dividing the recovery curve into three parts were needed as the early, intermediate, and late times, which are typically distinguished by the time required for the imbibition front to reach the closed boundary at the end of the core. Correlations among the exponential coefficients and rock/fluid properties were developed. It was observed that different rock/fluid properties and transfer mechanisms (capillary imbibition and gravity drainage) govern the process for each part. Hence, the analyses done in this study were useful not only for developing explicit transfer functions but also identifying the physics of the counter-current imbibition recovery.  相似文献   

13.
认识双重多孔介质中油水两相微观渗流机制是回答形成什么类型的裂隙网络可提高油藏采收率的关键. 微裂隙的分布可以提高多孔介质的绝对渗透率,但对于基质孔隙中的流体介质,微裂隙的存在会引起多孔介质中局部流体压力和流场的变化,导致局部流动以微裂隙流动为主,甚至出现窜流现象,降低驱油效率. 本文基于孔与裂隙双重网络模型,在网络进口设定两条平行等长且具有一定间隔的微裂隙,分析微裂隙的相对间隔(微裂隙之间距离/喉道长度)和微裂隙相对长度(微裂隙长度/喉道长度)对于微观渗流特征的影响. 结果表明:随微裂隙相对长度的增加,出现驱油效率逐渐降低,相对渗透率曲线中的油水共渗区水饱和度和等渗点增加,油水两相的共渗范围减小等现象;随着微裂隙之间相对间隔增大,周围越来越多的基质孔穴间的压力差减小,在毛管压力的限制下,驱替相绕过这些区域,而导致水窜现象.   相似文献   

14.
Counter-current spontaneous imbibition (COUCSI) in porous media is driven by capillary forces. Capillary action results in a high capillary imbibition pressure at the imbibition front and a low capillary drainage pressure at the outlet face. It is the difference between these two pressures that draws in the wetting phase and pushes out the non-wetting phase. A technique for measuring the capillary pressure at an imbibition front under restricted flow conditions has been developed and applied to Berea sandstone with a range of permeabilities. In the experiments, brine was the wetting phase and refined oil was the non-wetting phase. One end face of a sandstone core was butted to a short section of a finer-pored rock. The composite core surface was then sealed, apart from the end face of the low-permeability segment. A connection to a pressure transducer was set in the opposite end face of the core. Initially, the main core segment was filled with oil. In most cases, the finer-pored segment was filled with brine. Imbibition was started by immersing the core in brine. The purpose of the finer-pored segment was to prevent the escape of non-wetting phase from the open face. For some tests there was an initial period of co-current spontaneous imbibition (COCSI) created by allowing production of non-wetting phase through an outlet tapping in the sealed end face. The outlet was then connected to the transducer and the imbibition changed to COUCSI. There followed an increase in the monitored end pressure to a maximum as fluid redistributed within the core. For the tests in which the fine-pored segments were pre-saturated with brine, even without an initial period of co-current imbibition, limited invasion of the main core segment by brine resulted in an asymptotic rise of the end pressure to a maximum as the imbibition front dispersed. To confirm that the dispersing front did not reach the dead end of the core, the distance of advance of the wetting liquid was detected by a series of electrodes. The maximum value of the end pressure provides an estimate of the capillary pressure at an imbibition front for COUCSI. The maximum capillary pressure generated by the invading fluids ranged from 6.6 kPa to 42 kPa for sandstone with permeabilities between 1.050 (μm)2 and 0.06 (μm)2.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
An experimental investigation is presented of immiscible, high-mobility ratio forced imbibition in a representative linear homogeneous sandstone. Water floods with mobility ratios (from 1 to 155) at various water injection rates were conducted. Fine-scale (order mm3) in situ water saturation history was collected via X-ray computed tomography (CT). Three-dimensional images were constructed of stable displacement and the initiation and growth of unstable water fingers. Interestingly, viscous fingers do not lead the displacement front by significant distances, counter to experience in miscible systems. In this homogeneous porous medium, both water (displacing phase) injection rate and oil (displaced phase) viscosity have an obvious effect on the stability of the water front. As the oil viscosity and displacement rate increase, the water front becomes less stable. In addition, the so-called shock mobility ratio, as computed from steady-state relative permeability, is found to be predictive regarding displacement front stability. When the shock mobility ratio is greater than 1, the displacement is always unstable. Steady-state relative permeability, however, is found to be a function of viscosity ratio for unstable displacements.  相似文献   

17.
In force gas/oil gravity drainage process in fractured porous media, gas is flowing in both matrix and fractures leading to produce a finite gas pressure gradient. Consequently, viscous force plays an important role for displacing matrix oil toward fractures in addition to gravity force that is required to be modeled appropriately. A new analytical model for estimation of steady state oil saturation distribution with assumption of fixed gas pressure gradient throughout the matrix is presented. Moreover, based on some results of this analytical model a different numerical formulation is developed to predict the performance of oil production process. Comparison of the results obtained from this numerical model with the results of a conventional simulator demonstrates that the newly developed model can be applied with satisfactory accuracy. Numerical simulations show that the viscous displacement in fractured porous media can reduce the capillary threshold height, and thus it suggests the force gravity drainage as a favorable production mechanism when the matrix length is close to the threshold height.  相似文献   

18.
Accurate models of multiphase flow in porous media and predictions of oil recovery require a thorough understanding of the physics of fluid flow. Current simulators assume, generally, that local capillary equilibrium is reached instantaneously during any flow mode. Consequently, capillary pressure and relative permeability curves are functions solely of water saturation. In the case of imbibition, the assumption of instantaneous local capillary equilibrium allows the balance equations to be cast in the form of a self-similar, diffusion-like problem. Li et al. [J. Petrol. Sci. Eng. 39(3) (2003), 309–326] analyzed oil production data from spontaneous countercurrent imbibition experiments and inferred that they observed the self-similar behavior expected from the mathematical equations. Others (Barenblatt et al. [Soc. Petrol. Eng. J. 8(4) (2002), 409–416]; Silin and Patzek [Transport in Porous Media 54 (2004), 297–322]) assert that local equilibirum is not reached in porous media during spontaneous imbibition and nonequilibirium effects should be taken into account. Simulations and definitive experiments are conducted at core scale in this work to reveal unequivocally nonequilbirium effects. Experimental in-situ saturation data obtained with a computerized tomography scanner illustrate significant deviation from the numerical local-equilibrium based results. The data indicates: (i) capillary imbibition is an inherently nonequilibrium process and (ii) the traditional, multi-phase, reservoir simulation equations may not well represent the true physics of the process.  相似文献   

19.
Evaluation of relative permeability coefficients is one of the key steps in reliable simulation of two-phase flow in porous media. An extensive body of work exists on evaluation of these coefficients for two-phase flow under pressure gradient. Oil transport under an applied electrical gradient in porous media is also governed by the principles of two-phase flow, but is less understood. In this paper, relative permeability coefficients under applied electric field are evaluated for a specific case of two- phase fluid flow in water-wet porous media, where the second fluid phase is oil. It is postulated that the viscous drag on the oil phase, exerted by the electro-osmotic flow of the water phase, is responsible for the transport of oil in the absence of a pressure gradient. Reliable prediction of the flow patterns necessitates accurate representation and determination of the relative permeability coefficients under the electrical gradient. The contribution of each phase to the flow is represented mathematically, and the relative permeability coefficients are evaluated through electro-osmotic flow measurements conducted on oil bearing rock cores.  相似文献   

20.
During waterflooding of a fractured formation, water may channel through the fracture or interconnected network of fractures, leaving a large portion of oil bearing rock unswept. One remedial practice is injection of a gelling solution into the fracture. Such placement of a gelling mixture is associated with leak-off from the fracture face into the adjoining matrix. Design of a gel treatment needs understanding of the flow of gelling mixture in and around the fracture. This flow is addressed here for Cr(III)–partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide formulation through experiments and conceptual model. A fractured slab was used to develop a lab-model, where the flow along the fracture and simultaneous leak-off into the matrix can be controlled. Also, the fracture and matrix properties had to be evaluated individually for a meaningful analysis of the displacement of gelling solution. During this displacement, the gelling fluid leaked off from the fracture into the matrix as a front, resulting in a decreasing velocity (and pressure gradient) along the fracture. With pressure in the fracture held constant with time, the leak-off rate decreased as the viscous front progressed into the matrix. The drop in leak-off rate was rapid during the initial phase of displacement. A simple model, based on the injection of a viscous solution into the dual continua, could explain the displacement of Cr(III)–polyacrylamide gelling mixture through the fractured slab. This study rules out any major complication from the immature gelling fluid, e.g., build-up of cake layer on the fracture face. The model, due to its simplicity may become useful for quick sizing of gel treatment, and any regression-based evaluation of fluid properties in a fracture for other applications.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号