Core Effective and Relative Permeability Measurements for Conventional and Unconventional Reservoirs by Saturation Monitoring in High Frequency 3d Gradient NMR

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Chin ◽  
Safdar Ali ◽  
Ashish Mathur ◽  
Colton Barnes ◽  
William Von Gonten

Abstract A big challenge in tight conventional and unconventional rock systems is the lack of representative reservoir deliverability models for movement of water, oil and gas through micro-pore and nano-pore networks. Relative permeability is a key input in modelling these rocks; but due to limitations in core analysis techniques, permeability has become a knob or tuning parameter in reservoir simulation. Current relative permeability measurements on conventional core samples rely on density contrast between oil/water or gas/water on CT (Computed Tomography) scans and recording of effluent volumes to determine relative fluid saturations during the core flooding process. However, tight rocks are characterized by low porosities (< 10 %) and ultra-low permeabilities (< 1 micro-Darcy), that make effective and relative permeability measurements very difficult, time-consuming, and prone to high errors associated with low pore volumes and flow rates. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) measurements have been used extensively in the industry to measure fluid porosities, pore size characterization, wettability evaluation, etc. Core NMR scans can provide accurate quantification of pore fluids (oil, gas, water) even in very small quantities, using T2, T1T2 and D-T2 activation sequences. We have developed a novel process to perform experiments that measure effective and relative permeability values on both conventional and tight reservoirs at reservoir conditions while accurately monitoring fluid saturations and fluid fronts in a 12 MHz 3D gradient NMR spectrometer. The experimental process starts by acquiring Micro-CT scans of the cylindrical rock plugs to screen the samples for artifacts or microcracks that may affect permeability measurements. Once the samples are chosen, NMR T2 and T1T2 scans are performed to establish residual fluid saturations in the as-received state. If a liquid effective permeability test is required, the samples are then saturated with the given liquid through a combination of humidification, vacuum-assisted spontaneous imbibition, and saturation under pressure and temperature. After saturation, NMR scans are obtained to verify the volumes of the liquids and determine if the samples have achieved complete saturation. The sample is then loaded into a special core-flooding vessel that is invisible to the NMR spectrometer to minimize interference with the NMR signals from the fluids in the sample. The sample is brought up to reservoir stress and temperature, and the main flowing fluid is injected from one side of the sample while controlling the pressures on the other side of the sample with a back pressure regulator. The saturation front of the injected fluid is continuously monitored using 2D and 3D gradient NMR scans and the volumes of different fluids in the sample are measured using NMR T2 and T1T2 scans. The use of a 12 MHz NMR spectrometer provides very high SNR (signal-to-noise ratio); and clear distinction of water and hydrocarbon signals in the core plug during the entire process. The scanning times are also reduced by orders of magnitude, thereby allowing for more scans to properly capture the saturation front and changes in saturation. Simultaneously, the fluid flowrates and pressures are recorded in order to compute permeability values. The setup is rated to 10,000 psi confining pressures, 9000 psi of pore pressure and a working temperature of up to 100 C. Flowrates as low as 0.00001 cc/min can be recorded. These tests have been done with brine, dead and live crudes, and hydrocarbon gases. The measured relative permeability values have been used successfully in both simulation and production modelling studies in various reservoirs worldwide.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward Ennin

Abstract Geological storage of CO2 in saline aquifers is recognized as a favorable technique that could deliver a significant decrease in CO2 emissions over the short to medium-term. However, the major risk is the possibility of leakage and injection limitation due to pore pressure. This research investigates the three major mechanisms of CO2 trapping to determine which method safely captures the most CO2, interrogates the pore pressure effect on storage, and compares traditional core flooding methods for CO2 storage with CO2 drainage which is more practical in the aquifer. A core flooding set up was built to replicate reservoir conditions of the Anadarko Basin in Texas, USA. The research involved three reservoir pay zone rocks obtained from depths of about 7687ft that were pieced together to undergo core flooding at 4400psi-5200psi and a temperature of 168°F. In the first study conducted the core was flooded with supercritical CO2 and brine of salinity 4000ppm to generate relative permeability curves to represent drainage and imbibition. For the duration of the 3rd, 4th, and 5th studies the core saturated with brine is flooded with CO2 at pressures of 4400psi, 4800psi, and 5200psi. Parameters like the volume of CO2 captured, connate water volumes, differential pressure, Ph of produced water, trapping efficiency, relative permeability, and fractional flow curves are noted. After scrutinizing the result it is observed that the highest volume of CO2 is captured by solubility trapping followed by structural trapping and residual trapping in that order. From this research, it can be concluded that CO2 trapping, at least for these reservoir rocks, is not affected by pore pressure. Also contrary to most practices CO2 storage is best replaced in the laboratory using drainage experiments instead of the widely used relative permeability approach.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 219-226
Author(s):  
Haixia Hu ◽  
Wei Luo ◽  
Qinghua Wang ◽  
Junzheng Yang ◽  
Xiaoyan Zhang ◽  
...  

The oil-water and gas-water relative permeability curves are important reference data for the dynamic analysis and numerical simulation of oil and gas reservoir exploitation. Although the petroleum industry of China and other countries have formulated reference standards for the measuring methods of relative permeability of cores, they haven’t given the definite reference values of the core length, therefore we cannot know for sure whether different core length values are required in the measurement and whether the core length has an impact on the measurement results. In view of this gap, this paper conducted a research on the relative permeability of cores with different lengths. The core samples are artificial core with similar properties as the outcrop cores of the Halfaya Oilfield (Iraq), in our experiment, the oil-water and gas-water relative permeability curves of the sample cores were measured and the results suggest that, for the oil-water relative permeability curves, as the core length grows, the iso-permeability points move to the right, and they basically stabilize when the core length is greater than 20cm; as for gas-water relative permeability curves, in case of low-permeability cores, under constant injection pressure, as the core length grows, the iso-permeability points and the two-phase co-permeation areas present an obvious tendency of moving to the left, but when the core length is greater than 20cm, such tendency is not obvious, and the high-permeability cores do not have such characteristics. These results indicate that, the unsteady-state two-phase relative permeability measurement experiments obtained accurate results at a core length of about 20cm, which provided a reference for similar experiments in subsequent research.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 2744
Author(s):  
Chia-Wei Kuo ◽  
Sally M. Benson

New guidelines and suggestions for taking reliable effective relative permeability measurements in heterogeneous rocks are presented. The results are based on a combination of high resolution of 3D core-flooding simulations and semi-analytical solutions for the heterogeneous cores. Synthetic “data sets” are generated using TOUGH2 and are subsequently used to calculate effective relative permeability curves. A comparison between the input relative permeability curves and “calculated” relative permeability is used to assess the accuracy of the “measured” values. The results show that, for a capillary number (Ncv = kLpc × A/H2μCO2qt) smaller than a critical value, flows are viscous dominated. Under these conditions, saturation depends only on the fractional flow as well as capillary heterogeneity, and is independent of flow rate, gravity, permeability, core length, and interfacial tension. Accurate whole-core effective relative permeability measurements can be obtained regardless of the orientation of the core and for a high degree of heterogeneity under a range of relevant and practical conditions. Importantly, the transition from the viscous to gravity/capillary dominated flow regimes occurs at much higher flow rates for heterogeneous rocks. For the capillary numbers larger than the critical value, saturation gradients develop along the length of the core and accurate relative permeability measurements are not obtained using traditional steady-state methods. However, if capillary pressure measurements at the end of the core are available or can be estimated from independently measured capillary pressure curves and the measured saturation at the inlet and outlet of the core, accurate effective relative permeability measurements can be obtained even when there is a small saturation gradient across the core.


2016 ◽  
Vol 19 (01) ◽  
pp. 181-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. J. Argüelles-Vivas ◽  
T.. Babadagli

Summary Analytical models were developed for non-isothermal gas/heavy-oil gravity drainage and water-heavy oil displacements in round capillary tubes including the effects of a temperature gradient throughout the system. By use of the model solution for a bundle of capillaries, relative permeability curves were generated at different temperature conditions. The results showed that water/gas-heavy oil interface location, oil-drainage velocity, and production rate depend on the change of oil properties with temperature. The displacement of heavy oil by water or gas was accelerated under a positive temperature gradient, including the spontaneous imbibition of water. Relative permeability curves were greatly affected by temperature gradient and showed significant changes compared with the curves at constant temperature. Clarifications were made as to the effect of variable temperature compared with the constant (but high) temperatures throughout the bundle of capillaries.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 626
Author(s):  
Jiyuan Zhang ◽  
Bin Zhang ◽  
Shiqian Xu ◽  
Qihong Feng ◽  
Xianmin Zhang ◽  
...  

The relative permeability of coal to gas and water exerts a profound influence on fluid transport in coal seams in both primary and enhanced coalbed methane (ECBM) recovery processes where multiphase flow occurs. Unsteady-state core-flooding tests interpreted by the Johnson–Bossler–Naumann (JBN) method are commonly used to obtain the relative permeability of coal. However, the JBN method fails to capture multiple gas–water–coal interaction mechanisms, which inevitably results in inaccurate estimations of relative permeability. This paper proposes an improved assisted history matching framework using the Bayesian adaptive direct search (BADS) algorithm to interpret the relative permeability of coal from unsteady-state flooding test data. The validation results show that the BADS algorithm is significantly faster than previous algorithms in terms of convergence speed. The proposed method can accurately reproduce the true relative permeability curves without a presumption of the endpoint saturations given a small end-effect number of <0.56. As a comparison, the routine JBN method produces abnormal interpretation results (with the estimated connate water saturation ≈33% higher than and the endpoint water/gas relative permeability only ≈0.02 of the true value) under comparable conditions. The proposed framework is a promising computationally effective alternative to the JBN method to accurately derive relative permeability relations for gas–water–coal systems with multiple fluid–rock interaction mechanisms.


SPE Journal ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (01) ◽  
pp. 158-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pål Østebø Andersen ◽  
Yangyang Qiao ◽  
Dag Chun Standnes ◽  
Steinar Evje

Summary This paper presents a numerical study of water displacing oil using combined cocurrent/countercurrent spontaneous imbibition (SI) of water displacing oil from a water-wet matrix block exposed to water on one side and oil on the other. Countercurrent flows can induce a stronger viscous coupling than during cocurrent flows, leading to deceleration of the phases. Even as water displaces oil cocurrently, the saturation gradient in the block induces countercurrent capillary diffusion. The extent of countercurrent flow may dominate the domain of the matrix block near the water-exposed surfaces while cocurrent imbibition may dominate the domain near the oil-exposed surfaces, implying that one unique effective relative permeability curve for each phase does not adequately represent the system. Because relative permeabilities are routinely measured cocurrently, it is an open question whether the imbibition rates in the reservoir (depending on a variety of flow regimes and parameters) will in fact be correctly predicted. We present a generalized model of two-phase flow dependent on momentum equations from mixture theory that can account dynamically for viscous coupling between the phases and the porous media because of fluid/rock interaction (friction) and fluid/fluid interaction (drag). These momentum equations effectively replace and generalize Darcy's law. The model is parameterized using experimental data from the literature. We consider a water-wet matrix block in one dimension that is exposed to oil on one side and water on the other side. This setup favors cocurrent SI. We also account for the fact that oil produced countercurrently into water must overcome the so-called capillary backpressure, which represents a resistance for oil to be produced as droplets. This parameter can thus influence the extent of countercurrent production and hence viscous coupling. This complex mixture of flow regimes implies that it is not straightforward to model the system by a single set of relative permeabilities, but rather relies on a generalized momentum-equation model that couples the two phases. In particular, directly applying cocurrently measured relative permeability curves gives significantly different predictions than the generalized model. It is seen that at high water/oil-mobility ratios, viscous coupling can lower the imbibition rate and shift the production from less countercurrent to more cocurrent compared with conventional modeling. Although the viscous-coupling effects are triggered by countercurrent flow, reducing or eliminating countercurrent production by means of the capillary backpressure does not eliminate the effects of viscous coupling that take place inside the core, which effectively lower the mobility of the system. It was further seen that viscous coupling can increase the remaining oil saturation in standard cocurrent-imbibition setups.


2019 ◽  
Vol 89 ◽  
pp. 04005 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Giwelli ◽  
MZ Kashim ◽  
MB Clennell ◽  
L Esteban ◽  
R Noble ◽  
...  

We conducted relatively long duration core-flooding tests on three representative core samples under reservoir conditions to quantify the potential impact of flow rates on fines production/permeability change. Supercritical CO2 was injected cyclically with incremental increases in flow rate (2─14 ml/min) with live brine until a total of 7 cycles were completed. To avoid unwanted fluid-rock reaction when live brine was injected into the sample, and to mimic the in-situ geochemical conditions of the reservoir, a packed column was installed on the inflow accumulator line to pre-equilibrate the fluid before entering the core sample. The change in the gas porosity and permeability of the tested plug samples due to different mechanisms (dissolution and/or precipitation) that may occur during scCO2/live brine injection was investigated. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) T2 determination, X-ray CT scans and chemical analyses of the produced brine were also conducted. Results of pre- and post-test analyses (poroperm, NMR, X-ray CT) showed no clear evidence of formation damage even after long testing cycles and only minor or no dissolution (after large injected pore volumes (PVs) ~ 200). The critical flow rates (if there is one) were higher than the maximum rates applied. Chemical analyses of the core effluent showed that the rock samples for which a pre-column was installed do not experience carbonate dissolution.


Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (23) ◽  
pp. 4212
Author(s):  
Mohamed Said ◽  
Bashirul Haq ◽  
Dhafer Al Shehri ◽  
Mohammad Mizanur Rahman ◽  
Nasiru Salahu Muhammed ◽  
...  

Tertiary oil recovery, commonly known as enhanced oil recovery (EOR), is performed when secondary recovery is no longer economically viable. Polymer flooding is one of the EOR methods that improves the viscosity of injected water and boosts oil recovery. Xanthan gum is a relatively cheap biopolymer and is suitable for oil recovery at limited temperatures and salinities. This work aims to modify xanthan gum to improve its viscosity for high-temperature and high-salinity reservoirs. The xanthan gum was reacted with acrylic acid in the presence of a catalyst in order to form xanthan acrylate. The chemical structure of the xanthan acrylate was verified by FT-IR and NMR analysis. The discovery hybrid rheometer (DHR) confirmed that the viscosity of the modified xanthan gum was improved at elevated temperatures, which was reflected in the core flood experiment. Two core flooding experiments were conducted using six-inch sandstone core plugs and Arabian light crude oil. The first formulation—the xanthan gum with 3% NaCl solution—recovered 14% of the residual oil from the core. In contrast, the modified xanthan gum with 3% NaCl solution recovered about 19% of the residual oil, which was 5% higher than the original xanthan gum. The xanthan gum acrylate is therefore more effective at boosting tertiary oil recovery in the sandstone core.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Kumar ◽  
Mariyamni Awang ◽  
Ghulam Abbas ◽  
Khurram Farouque ◽  
Sheraz Ahmed

2006 ◽  
Vol 9 (06) ◽  
pp. 688-697 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahmoud Jamiolahmady ◽  
Ali Danesh ◽  
D.H. Tehrani ◽  
Mehran Sohrabi

Summary It has been demonstrated, first by this laboratory and subsequently by other researchers, that the gas and condensate relative permeability can increase significantly by increasing rate, contrary to the common understanding. There are now a number of correlations in the literature and commercial reservoir simulators accounting for the positive effect of coupling and the negative effect of inertia at near-wellbore conditions. The available functional forms estimate the two effects separately and include a number of parameters, which should be determined with measurements at high-velocity conditions. Measurements of gas/condensate relative permeability at simulated near-wellbore conditions are very demanding and expensive. Recent experimental findings in this laboratory indicate that measured gas/condensate relative permeability values on cores with different characteristics become more similar if expressed in terms of fractional flow instead of the commonly used saturation. This would lower the number of rock curves required in reservoir studies. Hence, we have used a large data bank of gas/condensate relative permeability measurements to develop a general correlation accounting for the combined effect of coupling and inertia as a function of fractional flow. The parameters of the new correlation are either universal, applicable to all types of rocks, or can be determined from commonly measured petrophysical data. The developed correlation has been evaluated by comparing its prediction with the gas/condensate relative permeability values measured at near-wellbore conditions on reservoir rocks not used in its development. The results are quite satisfactory, confirming that the correlation can provide reliable information on variations of relative permeability at near-wellbore conditions with no requirement for expensive measurements. Introduction The process of condensation around the wellbore in a gas/condensate reservoir, when the pressure falls below the dewpoint, creates a region in which both gas and condensate phases flow. The flow behavior in this region is controlled by the viscous, capillary, and inertial forces. This, along with the presence of condensate in all the pores, dictates a flow mechanism that is different from that of gas/oil and gas/condensate in the bulk of the reservoir (Danesh et al. 1989). Accurate determination of gas/condensate relative permeability (kr) values, which is very important in well-deliverability estimates, is a major challenge and requires an approach different from that for conventional gas/oil systems. It has been widely accepted that relative permeability (kr) values at low values of interfacial tension (IFT) are strong functions of IFT as well as fluid saturation (Bardon and Longeron 1980; Asar and Handy 1988; Haniff and Ali 1990; Munkerud 1995). Danesh et al. (1994) were first to report the improvement of the relative permeability of condensing systems owing to an increase in velocity as well as that caused by a reduction in IFT. This flow behavior, referred to as the positive coupling effect, was subsequently confirmed experimentally by other investigators (Henderson et al. 1995, 1996; Ali et al. 1997; Blom et al. 1997). Jamiolahmady et al. (2000) were first to study the positive coupling effect mechanistically capturing the competition of viscous and capillary forces at the pore level, where there is simultaneous flow of the two phases with intermittent opening and closure of the gas passage by condensate. Jamiolahmady et al. (2003) developed a steady-dynamic network model capturing this flow behavior and predicted some kr values, which were quantitatively comparable with the experimentally measured values.


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