Gas-Water Flow Behaviour During Mutual Displacement in Porous Media

2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-22
Author(s):  
Renyi Cao ◽  
Junjie Xu ◽  
Xiaoping Yang ◽  
Renkai Jiang ◽  
Changchao Chen

During oilfield development, there exist multi-cycle gas–water mutual displacement processes. This means that a cycling process such as water driving gas–gas driving water–water driving gas is used for the operation of injection and production in a single well (such as foam huff and puff in single well or water-bearing gas storage). In this paper, by using core- and micro-pore scales model, we study the distribution of gas and water and the flow process of gas-water mutual displacement. We find that gas and water are easier to disperse in the porous media and do not flow in continuous gas and water phases. The Jamin effect of the gas or bubble becomes more severe and makes the flow mechanism of multi-cycle gas–water displacement different from the conventional water driving gas or gas driving water processes. Based on experiments of gas–water mutual displacement, the changing mechanism of gas–water displacement is determined. The results indicate that (1) after gas–water mutual displacement, the residual gas saturation of a gas–water coexistence zone becomes larger and the two-phase zone becomes narrower, (2) increasing the number of injection and production cycles causes the relative permeability of gas to increase and relative permeability for water to decrease, (3) it becomes easier for gas to intrude and the invaded water becomes more difficult to drive out and (4) the microcosmic fluid distribution of each stage have a great difference, which caused the two-phase region becomes narrower and effective volume of gas storage becomes narrower.

2012 ◽  
Vol 616-618 ◽  
pp. 964-969 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Yang ◽  
Xiang Fang Li ◽  
Ke Liu Wu ◽  
Meng Lu Lin ◽  
Jun Tai Shi

Oil and water relative permeabilities are main coefficients in describing the fluid flow in porous media; however, oil and water relative permeability for low - ultra low perm oil reservoir can not be obtained from present correlations. Based on the characteristics of oil and water flow in porous media, the model for calculating the oil and water relative permeability of low and ultra-low perm oil reservoirs, which considering effects of threshold pressure gradient and capillary pressure, has been established. Through conducting the non-steady oil and water relative permeability experiments, oil and water relative permeability curves influenced by different factors have been calculated. Results show that: the threshold pressure gradient more prominently affects the oil and water relative permeability; capillary pressure cannot influence the water relative permeability but only the oil relative permeability. Considering effects of threshold pressure gradient and capillary pressure yields the best development result, and more accordant with the flow process of oil and water in low – ultra low perm oil reservoirs.


1979 ◽  
Vol 19 (01) ◽  
pp. 15-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.M. Sigmund ◽  
F.G. McCaffery

Abstract With typical heterogeneous carbonate coresamples, large uncertainties of unknown magnitudecan occur in the relative permeabilities derived using different methods. This situation can beimproved by analyzing the recovery and pressureresponse to two-phase laboratory displacement tests by a nonlinear least-squares procedure. Thesuggested technique fits the finite-differencesolution of the Buckley-Leverett two-phase flowequations(which include capillary pressure) to theobserved recovery and pressure data. The procedureis used to determine relative-permeability curves characterized by two parameters and their standarderrors for heterogeneous cores from two Albertacarbonate reservoirs. Introduction Several recent investigations have recognizedpossible problems when obtaining reliable two-phasedisplacement data from heterogeneous carbonate core samples. Huppler stated that waterfloodresults on cores with significant heterogeneitiescan be sensitive to flooding rate, core length, andwettability, and that these effects should beconsidered before applying the laboratory results atfield flooding rates. Brandner and Slotboomsuggested that realistic displacement results maynot be obtainable when vertically flooding aheterogeneous core with a nonwetting phase becauseof the fluid's inability to maintain a properdistribution when the sample length is less than the height of capillary rise. Ehrlich noted thatstandard relative-permeability measurement methodsusing core plugs cannot be applied when the media are heterogeneous. Archer and Wong reported that application of theconventional Johnson- Bossler - Neumann (JBN)methods for determining relative permeabilities froma waterflood test could give erroneous results forheterogeneous carbonate as well as for relativelyhomogeneous porous media having a mixed wettability (see Refs. 1, 6, and 7). The observedstepwise or humped shape of water relativepermeability curves mainly were attributed to theeffect of water breakthrough ahead of the main floodfront entering into the JBN calculation. Archer andWong suggested that such abnormally shapedrelative-permeability curves do not represent theproperties of the bulk of the core sample, and proposed the use of a reservoir simulator forinterpreting laboratory waterflood data. The work referred to above provides the majorbackground for this study involving the developmentof an improved unsteady-state test method tocharacterize the relative-permeability properties ofheterogeneous carbonate core samples. The methodcan be applied to all porous media, regardless ofthe size and distribution of the heterogeneities.However, the presence of large-scaleheterogeneities, especially in the form of vugs, fractures, and stratification, could cause the derivedrelative-permeability relations to be affected by viscosityratio and displacement rate. Remember also that extrapolation of any core test data to a field scaleis associated with many uncertainties, particularlyfor heterogeneous formations. The inclusion ofcapillary pressure effects permits the interpretationof displacement tests at reservoir rates. The proposed calculation procedure extends theapproach suggested by Archer and Wong in thatthe degree of fit between observed laboratory dataand simulator results is quantified. We suggest thatrelative-permeability curves for a variety of rocktypes can be expressed in terms of two adjustable parameters and their standard error estimates.To illustrate the method, the results of displacementtests performed on cores from Swan Hills Beaverhill Lake limestone oil reservoir and Rainbow F KegRiver dolomite oil reservoir are interpreted. SPEJ P. 15^


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavel Bedrikovetsky ◽  
Dan Marchesin ◽  
Paulo Roberto Ballin

Abstract Two-phase flow with hysteresis in porous media is described by the Buckley-Leverett model with three types of fractional flow functions: imbibition, drainage and scanning. The mathematical theory for the Riemann problem and for non-self-similar initial-boundary problem is developed. The structure of the solutions is presented and the physical interpretation of the phenomena is discussed. We obtain the analytical solution for the injection of water slug with gas drive into oil reservoirs. The solutions show that the effect of hysteresis is to decrease gas flux (in the case where the drainage relative permeability lies below the imbibition relative permeability). This effect increases oil recovery for Water-Alternate-Gas injection in oil reservoirs.


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