scholarly journals The Applicability of Different Fluid Media to Measure Effective Stress Coefficient for Rock Permeability

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Ying Wang ◽  
Guozhi Li ◽  
Min Li ◽  
Jing Zhang

Effective stress coefficient for permeability (ESCK) is the key parameter to evaluate the properties of reservoir stress sensitivity. So far, little studies have clarified which ESCK is correct for a certain reservoir while rock ESCK is measured differently by different fluid media. Thus, three different fluids were taken to measure a fine sandstone sample’s ESCK, respectively. As a result, the ESCK was measured to be the smallest by injecting nitrogen, the largest by injecting water, and between the two by brine. Besides, those microcharacteristics such as rock component, clay mineral content, and pore structure were further analyzed based on some microscopic experiments. Rock elastic modulus was reduced when water-sensitive clay minerals were encountered with aqua fluid media so as to enlarge the rock ESCK value. Moreover, some clay minerals reacting with water can spall and possibly block pore throats. Compared with water, brine can soften the water sensitivity; however, gas has no water sensitivity effects. Therefore, to choose which fluid medium to measure reservoir ESCK is mainly depending on its own exploitation conditions. For gas reservoirs using gas to measure ESCK is more reliable than water or brine, while using brine is more appropriate for oil reservoirs.

2021 ◽  
Vol 143 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoliang Huang ◽  
Zhilin Qi ◽  
Hao Zhang ◽  
Wende Yan ◽  
Chang Yan ◽  
...  

Abstract Water-soluble gas reservoirs have the characteristics of high temperature and high pressure (HTHP) and experience obvious pressure-sensitive effects during the production process. Therefore, the influences of formation water and dissolved natural gas in formation water on water-soluble gas reservoirs are different from conventional gas reservoirs. In view of this, this work first carried out a stress sensitivity test with irreducible water and variable internal pressure at high temperature for a water-soluble gas reservoir, showing that permeability loss ratio and effective stress have an exponential relationship, a result basically consistent with conventional tests. However, the stress sensitivity test result with irreducible water was greater than the stress sensitivity test result without irreducible water; porosity decreased slightly with increasing confining pressure, and the total decrease ratio was less than 5.2%, with an average of 3.01%. Second, a high-pressure, high-temperature, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) online detection system was introduced to detect the pore signal of core samples under different effective stress states, and pore compression and deformation characteristics were evaluated. Results show large pores to have been compressed slightly more than small pores, pores to be significantly compressed in the initial stage, and the greater the increase in effective stress, the more obvious the compression. Third, the occurrence and characteristic changes of irreducible water in the process of rock compression were detected by the NMR online system, indicating irreducible water to be difficult to migrate through compression in water-soluble gas reservoirs under slight compression of rock and pore structure and the occurrence and characteristics of irreducible water to have not changed significantly. Finally, by establishing a theoretical model of water-soluble gas reservoirs to simulate the water breakthrough of gas wells under stress sensitivity conditions, this work shows that when stress sensitivity exists, gas-well water breakthrough time is earlier and production is diminished.


2014 ◽  
Vol 962-965 ◽  
pp. 526-530
Author(s):  
Tao Gao ◽  
Xiao Guo ◽  
Hong Mei Yang ◽  
Hai Tao Li ◽  
Zheng Zhu

Change confining pressure experiment or pore pressure experiment is one of the commonly used method to evaluate the reservoir core stress sensitivity. However, a large number of studies have shown that core net stress is not equal to the effective stress,the drawdown pore pressure experiment are consistent with the characteristics of oil and gas field real development process. The pressure stability of drawdown pore pressure experiment is bad, so, a reliable modified method of change confining pressure stress sensitivity experiment is eagerly expected. On the basis of the differential method principle, effective stress coefficient can be determined through core experiments,and with the use of effective stress coefficient , change confining pressure experiment is modified. Main conclusions are as follows:For sandstone core,at reservoir original stress condition with the pore pressure from 15MPa to 11MPa effective stress coefficient from 0.436 to 0.415;Based on Terzaghi effective stress exaggerate stress sensitivity, ontology effective stress can weaken the stress sensitive; Based on effective stress coefficient in this paper correction stress sensitivity is medium weak,impacts on production results almost coincident with the drawdown pore pressure test results.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (24) ◽  
pp. 8345
Author(s):  
Xiaolong Zhang ◽  
Jianjun Liu ◽  
Jiecheng Song

The effective stress coefficient for permeability is a significant index for characterizing the variation in permeability with effective stress. The realization of its accuracy is essential for studying the stress sensitivity of oil and gas reservoirs. The determination of the effective stress coefficient for permeability can be mainly evaluated using the cross-plotting or response surface method. Both methods preprocess experimental data and preset a specific function relation, resulting in deviation in the calculation results. To improve the calculation accuracy of the effective stress coefficient for permeability, a 3D surface fitting calculation method was proposed according to the linear effective stress law and continuity hypothesis. The statistical parameters of the aforementioned three methods were compared, and the results showed that the three-dimensional (3D) surface fitting method had the advantages of a high correlation coefficient, low root mean square error, and low residual error. The principal of using the 3D surface fitting method to calculate the effective stress coefficient of permeability was to evaluate the influence of two independent variables on a dependent variable by means of a 3D nonlinear regression. Therefore, the method could be applied to studying the relationship between other physical properties and effective stress.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Bohnsack ◽  
Martin Potten ◽  
Simon Freitag ◽  
Florian Einsiedl ◽  
Kai Zosseder

AbstractIn geothermal reservoir systems, changes in pore pressure due to production (depletion), injection or temperature changes result in a displacement of the effective stresses acting on the rock matrix of the aquifer. To compensate for these intrinsic stress changes, the rock matrix is subjected to poroelastic deformation through changes in rock and pore volume. This in turn may induce changes in the effective pore network and thus in the hydraulic properties of the aquifer. Therefore, for the conception of precise reservoir models and for long-term simulations, stress sensitivity of porosity and permeability is required for parametrization. Stress sensitivity was measured in hydrostatic compression tests on 14 samples of rock cores stemming from two boreholes of the Upper Jurassic Malm aquifer of the Bavarian Molasse Basin. To account for the heterogeneity of this carbonate sequence, typical rock and facies types representing the productive zones within the thermal reservoir were used. Prior to hydrostatic investigations, the hydraulic (effective porosity, permeability) and geomechanical (rock strength, dynamic, and static moduli) parameters as well as the microstructure (pore and pore throat size) of each rock sample were studied for thorough sample characterization. Subsequently, the samples were tested in a triaxial test setup with effective stresses of up to 28 MPa (hydrostatic) to simulate in-situ stress conditions for depths up to 2000 m. It was shown that stress sensitivity of the porosity was comparably low, resulting in a relative reduction of 0.7–2.1% at maximum effective stress. In contrast, relative permeability losses were observed in the range of 17.3–56.7% compared to the initial permeability at low effective stresses. Stress sensitivity coefficients for porosity and permeability were derived for characterization of each sample and the different rock types. For the stress sensitivity of porosity, a negative correlation with rock strength and a positive correlation with initial porosity was observed. The stress sensitivity of permeability is probably controlled by more complex processes than that of porosity, where the latter is mainly controlled by the compressibility of the pore space. It may depend more on the compaction of precedented flow paths and the geometry of pores and pore throats controlling the connectivity within the rock matrix. In general, limestone samples showed a higher stress sensitivity than dolomitic limestone or dolostones, because dolomitization of the rock matrix may lead to an increasing stiffness of the rock. Furthermore, the stress sensitivity is related to the history of burial diagenesis, during which changes in the pore network (dissolution, precipitation, and replacement of minerals and cements) as well as compaction and microcrack formation may occur. This study, in addition to improving the quality of input parameters for hydraulic–mechanical modeling, shows that hydraulic properties in flow zones largely characterized by less stiff, porous limestones can deteriorate significantly with increasing effective stress.


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