scholarly journals Optimal Wetting Angles in Lattice Boltzmann Simulations of Viscous Fingering

Author(s):  
Peter Mora ◽  
Gabriele Morra ◽  
Dave A. Yuen ◽  
Ruben Juanes

AbstractWe conduct pore-scale simulations of two-phase flow using the 2D Rothman–Keller colour gradient lattice Boltzmann method to study the effect of wettability on saturation at breakthrough (sweep) when the injected fluid first passes through the right boundary of the model. We performed a suite of 189 simulations in which a “red” fluid is injected at the left side of a 2D porous model that is initially saturated with a “blue” fluid spanning viscosity ratios $$M = \nu _\mathrm{r}/\nu _\mathrm{b} \in [0.001,100]$$ M = ν r / ν b ∈ [ 0.001 , 100 ] and wetting angles $$\theta _\mathrm{w} \in [ 0^\circ ,180^\circ ]$$ θ w ∈ [ 0 ∘ , 180 ∘ ] . As expected, at low-viscosity ratios $$M=\nu _\mathrm{r}/\nu _\mathrm{b} \ll 1$$ M = ν r / ν b ≪ 1 we observe viscous fingering in which narrow tendrils of the red fluid span the model, and for high-viscosity ratios $$M \gg 1$$ M ≫ 1 , we observe stable displacement. The viscous finger morphology is affected by the wetting angle with a tendency for more rounded fingers when the injected fluid is wetting. However, rather than the expected result of increased saturation with increasing wettability, we observe a complex saturation landscape at breakthrough as a function of viscosity ratio and wetting angle that contains hills and valleys with specific wetting angles at given viscosity ratios that maximize sweep. This unexpected result that sweep does not necessarily increase with wettability has major implications to enhanced oil recovery and suggests that the dynamics of multiphase flow in porous media has a complex relationship with the geometry of the medium and the hydrodynamical parameters.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Mora ◽  
Gabriele Morra ◽  
Dave Yuen ◽  
Ruben Juanes

Abstract We present a suite of numerical simulations of two-phase flow through a 2D model of a porous medium using the Rothman-Keller Lattice Boltzmann Method to study the effect of viscous fingering on the recovery factor as a function of viscosity ratio and wetting angle. This suite involves simulations spanning wetting angles from non-wetting to perfectly wetting and viscosity ratios spanning from 0.01 through 100. Each simulation is initialized with a porous model that is fully saturated with a "blue" fluid, and a "red" fluid is then injected from the left. The simulation parameters are set such that the capillary number is 10, well above the threshold for viscous fingering, and with a Reynolds number of 0.2 which is well below the transition to turbulence and small enough such that inertial effects are negligible. Each simulation involves the "red" fluid being injected from the left at a constant rate such in accord with the specified capillary number and Reynolds number until the red fluid breaks through the right side of the model. As expected, the dominant effect is the viscosity ratio, with narrow tendrils (viscous fingering) occurring for small viscosity ratios with M ≪ 1, and an almost linear front occurring for viscosity ratios above unity. The wetting angle is found to have a more subtle and complicated role. For low wetting angles (highly wetting injected fluids), the finger morphology is more rounded whereas for high wetting angles, the fingers become narrow. The effect of wettability on saturation (recovery factor) is more complex than the expected increase in recovery factor as the wetting angle is decreased, with specific wetting angles at certain viscosity ratios that optimize yield. This complex phase space landscape with hills, valleys and ridges suggests the dynamics of flow has a complex relationship with the geometry of the medium and hydrodynamical parameters, and hence recovery factors. This kind of behavior potentially has immense significance to Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR). For the case of low viscosity ratio, the flow after breakthrough is localized mainly through narrow fingers but these evolve and broaden and the saturation continues to increase albeit at a reduced rate. For this reason, the recovery factor continues to increase after breakthrough and approaches over 90% after 10 times the breakthrough time.


Author(s):  
Peter Mora ◽  
Gabriele Morra ◽  
Dave A. Yuen ◽  
Ruben Juanes

AbstractWe present simulations of two-phase flow using the Rothman and Keller colour gradient Lattice Boltzmann method to study viscous fingering when a “red fluid” invades a porous model initially filled with a “blue” fluid with different viscosity. We conducted eleven suites of 81 numerical experiments totalling 891 simulations, where each suite had a different random realization of the porous model and spanned viscosity ratios in the range $$M\in [0.01,100]$$ M ∈ [ 0.01 , 100 ] and wetting angles in the range $$\theta _w\in [180^\circ ,0^\circ ]$$ θ w ∈ [ 180 ∘ , 0 ∘ ] to allow us to study the effect of these parameters on the fluid-displacement morphology and saturation at breakthrough (sweep). Although sweep often increased with wettability, this was not always so and the sweep phase space landscape, defined as the difference in saturation at a given wetting angle relative to saturation for the non-wetting case, had hills, ridges and valleys. At low viscosity ratios, flow at breakthrough is localized through narrow fingers that span the model. After breakthrough, the flow field continues to evolve and the saturation continues to increase albeit at a reduced rate, and eventually exceeds 90% for both non-wetting and wetting cases. The existence of a complicated sweep phase space at breakthrough, and continued post-breakthrough evolution suggests the hydrodynamics and sweep is a complicated function of wetting angle, viscosity ratio and time, which has major potential implications to Enhanced Oil Recovery by water flooding, and hence, on estimates of global oil reserves. Validation of these results via experiments is required to ensure they translate to field studies.


Author(s):  
Andreas G. Yiotis ◽  
John Psihogios ◽  
Michael E. Kainourgiakis ◽  
Aggelos Papaioannou ◽  
Athanassios K. Stubos

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 339
Author(s):  
I. Carneiro ◽  
M. Borges ◽  
S. Malta

In this work,we present three-dimensional numerical simulations of water-oil flow in porous media in order to analyze the influence of the heterogeneities in the porosity and permeability fields and, mainly, their relationships upon the phenomenon known in the literature as viscous fingering. For this, typical scenarios of heterogeneous reservoirs submitted to water injection (secondary recovery method) are considered. The results show that the porosity heterogeneities have a markable influence in the flow behavior when the permeability is closely related with porosity, for example, by the Kozeny-Carman (KC) relation.This kind of positive relation leads to a larger oil recovery, as the areas of high permeability(higher flow velocities) are associated with areas of high porosity (higher volume of pores), causing a delay in the breakthrough time. On the other hand, when both fields (porosity and permeability) are heterogeneous but independent of each other the influence of the porosity heterogeneities is smaller and may be negligible.


2021 ◽  
Vol 321 ◽  
pp. 01014
Author(s):  
Makoto Sugimoto ◽  
Tatsuya Miyazaki ◽  
Zelin Li ◽  
Masayuki Kaneda ◽  
Kazuhiko Suga

Stator coils of automobiles in operation generate heat and are cooled by a coolant poured from above. Since the behavior characteristic of the coolant poured on the coils is not clarified yet due to its complexity, the three-dimensional two-phase flow simulation is conducted. In this study, as a steppingstone to the simulation of the liquid falling on the actual coils, the coils are modelled with horizontal rectangular pillar arrays whose governing parameters can be easily changed. The two-phase flows are simulated using the lattice Boltzmann method and the phase-field model, and the effects of the governing parameters, such as the physical properties of the cooling liquid, the wettability, and the gap between the pillars, on the wetting area are investigated. The results show that the oil tends to spread across the pillars because of its high viscosity. Moreover, the liquid spreads quickly when the contact angle is small. In the case that the pillars are stacked, the wetting area of the inner pillars is larger than that of the exposed pillars.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rencheng Dong ◽  
Mary F. Wheeler ◽  
Hang Su ◽  
Kang Ma

Abstract Acid fracturing technique is widely applied to stimulate the productivity of carbonate reservoirs. The acid-fracture conductivity is created by non-uniform acid etching on fracture surfaces. Heterogeneous mineral distribution of carbonate reservoirs can lead to non-uniform acid etching during acid fracturing treatments. In addition, the non-uniform acid etching can be enhanced by the viscous fingering mechanism. For low-perm carbonate reservoirs, by multi-stage alternating injection of a low-viscosity acid and a high-viscosity polymer pad fluid during acid fracturing, the acid tends to form viscous fingers and etch fracture surfaces non-uniformly. To accurately predict the acid-fracture conductivity, this paper developed a 3D acid fracturing model to compute the rough acid fracture geometry induced by multi-stage alternating injection of pad and acid fluids. Based on the developed numerical simulator, we investigated the effects of viscous fingering, perforation design and stage period on the acid etching process. Compared with single-stage acid injection, multi-stage alternating injection of pad and acid fluids leads to narrower and longer acid-etched channels.


2012 ◽  
Vol 268-270 ◽  
pp. 547-550
Author(s):  
Qing Wang Liu ◽  
Xin Wang ◽  
Zhen Zhong Fan ◽  
Jiao Wang ◽  
Rui Gao ◽  
...  

Liaohe oil field block 58 for Huancai, the efficiency of production of thickened oil is low, and the efficiency of displacement is worse, likely to cause other issues. Researching and developing an type of Heavy Oil Viscosity Reducer for exploiting. The high viscosity of W/O emulsion changed into low viscosity O/W emulsion to facilitate recovery, enhanced oil recovery. Through the experiment determine the viscosity properties of Heavy Oil Viscosity Reducer. The oil/water interfacial tension is lower than 0.0031mN•m-1, salt-resisting is good. The efficiency of viscosity reduction is higher than 90%, and also good at 180°C.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document