Pore-Space Statistics and Capillary Pressure Curves From Volume-Controlled Porosimetry

1994 ◽  
Vol 9 (01) ◽  
pp. 46-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro G. Toledo ◽  
L.E. Scriven ◽  
H. Ted Davis
2019 ◽  
Vol 89 ◽  
pp. 02003
Author(s):  
Adam K Moss ◽  
Tim Benson ◽  
Tony Barrow

Many workers have recognised the link between Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) derived T2 distributions and pore size distributions in reservoir rocks. This property has been used to develop models to obtain primary drainage capillary pressure curves from T2 distributions. These models often assume that the rocks pore space resembles a simple bundle of capillary tubes. They do not consider the existence of multiple pore body connections and pore body restrictions/throats. The most successful models utilise variable scaling factors to convert T2 times to pore diameters and hence capillary pressure. The variable scaling factor approach recognises the existence of variable surface relaxivity throughout the pore space due to variations in mineralogy and pore topography. This investigation uses SCAL data from the ART NMR Sandstone Rock Catalogue to obtain core calibrated variable scaling factors for 174 reservoir sandstone samples. The depositional environments for these samples include; aeolian, fluvial, coastal and shallow and deep marine. The samples used have a wide variety of mineralogy, diagenetic overprints and cover six orders of magnitude in absolute permeability. Three different methods for obtaining the scaling factors are presented and the relative merits of each discussed. A global model to predict capillary pressure from NMR T2 distributions in reservoir sandstones has been developed using correlations between the variable scaling factors and permeability.


Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Yingfang Zhou ◽  
Dimitrios Georgios Hatzignatiou ◽  
Johan Olav Helland ◽  
Yulong Zhao ◽  
Jianchao Cai

In this work, we developed a semianalytical model to compute three-phase capillary pressure curves and associated fluid configurations for gas invasion in uniformly wet rock images. The fluid configurations and favorable capillary entry pressures are determined based on free energy minimization by combining all physically allowed three-phase arc menisci. The model was first validated against analytical solutions developed in a star-shaped pore space and subsequently employed on an SEM image of Bentheim sandstone. The simulated fluid configurations show similar oil-layer behavior as previously imaged three-phase fluid configurations. The simulated saturation path indicates that the oil-water capillary pressure can be described as a function of the water saturation only. The gas-oil capillary pressure can be represented as a function of gas saturation in the majority part of the three-phase region, while the three-phase displacements slightly reduce the accuracy of such representation. At small oil saturations, the gas-oil capillary pressure depends strongly on two-phase saturations.


1965 ◽  
Vol 5 (01) ◽  
pp. 15-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Norman R. Morrow ◽  
Colin C. Harris

Abstract The experimental points which describe capillary pressure curves are determined at apparent equilibria which are observed after hydrodynamic flow has ceased. For most systems, the time required to obtain equalization of pressure throughout the discontinuous part of a phase is prohibitive. To permit experimental points to be described as equilibria, a model of capillary behavior is proposed where mass transfer is restricted to bulk fluid flow. Model capillary pressure curves follow if the path described by such points is independent of the rate at which the saturation was changed to attain a capillary pressure point. A modified suction potential technique is used to study cyclic relationships between capillary pressure and moisture content for a porous mass. The time taken to complete an experiment was greatly reduced by using small samples. Introduction Capillary retention of liquid by porous materials has been investigated in the fields of hydrology, soil science, oil reservoir engineering, chemical engineering, soil mechanics, textiles, paper making and building materials. In studies of the immiscible displacement of one fluid by another within a porous bed, drainage columns and suction potential techniques have been used to obtain relationships between pressure deficiency and saturation (Fig. 1). Except where there is no hysteresis of contact angle and the solid is of simple geometry, such as a tube of uniform cross section, there is hysteresis in the relationship between capillary pressure and saturation. The relationship which has received most attention is displacement of fluid from an initially saturated bed (Fig. 1, Curve Ro), the final condition being an irreducible minimum fluid saturation Swr. Imbibition (Fig. 1, Curve A), further desaturation (Fig. 1, Curve R), and intermediate scanning curves have been studied to a lesser but increasing extent. This paper first considers the nature of the experimental points tracing the capillary pressure curves with respect to the modes and rates of mass transfer which are operative during the course of measurement. There are clear indications that the experimental points which describe these curves are obtained at apparent equilibria which are observed when viscous fluid flow has ceased; and any further changes in the fluid distribution are the result of much slower mass transfer processes, such as diffusion. Unless stated otherwise, this discussion applies to a stable packing of equal, smooth, hydrophilic spheres supported by a suction plate with water as the wetting phase and air as the nonwetting phase. SPEJ P. 15ˆ


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