multicomponent diffusion coefficients
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Lab on a Chip ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (16) ◽  
pp. 2768-2776 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Peters ◽  
Ludger Wolff ◽  
Sandra Haase ◽  
Julia Thien ◽  
Thorsten Brands ◽  
...  

Microfluidic measurement of multicomponent diffusion coefficients using minimal number of experiments with high accuracy in short time.


SPE Journal ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (02) ◽  
pp. 505-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.. Ghasemi ◽  
W.. Astutik ◽  
S. A. Alavian ◽  
C. H. Whitson ◽  
L.. Sigalas ◽  
...  

Summary This paper presents a novel technique to determine multicomponent diffusion coefficients for carbon dioxide (CO2) injection in a North Sea chalk field (NSCF) in Norway at reservoir conditions. The constant-volume-diffusion (CVD) method is used, consisting of an oil-saturated-chalk core in contact with an overlying free space, which is filled with the CO2. The experimental data are matched with an equation-of-state (EOS) -based compositional model. Transport by diffusion controls the dynamics of the constant-volume system and, together with phase equilibria, allows a consistent estimation of diffusion coefficients needed to describe the observed changes in system pressure. We conduct two experiments at reservoir conditions: One uses a core plug saturated with live oil and the other with stock-tank oil (STO). Once the experiments are completed, EOS-based compositional simulation is performed to match the experimental data by use of the oil- and gas-diffusion coefficients as history-matching parameters. The modeling work is conducted with a commercial reservoir simulator by use of a 2D radial-grid model to describe the experimental setup. The experiment uses an outcrop chalk core mounted in a vertically oriented core holder. The chalk is shorter than the core holder, thus resulting in an overlying void space. The system is initially saturated with oil at reservoir conditions. CO2 is then injected from the top, forming an overlying CO2 chamber and displacing oil toward the bottom of the core holder. Once CO2 fills the overlying bulk space, the system is isolated with no further injection or production. The CO2 and oil reach and remain in equilibrium locally at the gas/oil interface throughout the test, beginning and maintaining the diffusion mechanism. Diffusion of CO2 into the oil results in a decreasing pressure, which is the main history-matching parameter. The multicomponent diffusion coefficients are found to match the model pressure/time prediction to the experimental data. This suggests the modeling work flow incorporates a representative EOS model and the main transport dynamics controlled by diffusion are being treated properly. Proper simulation of CO2 injection in fractured-chalk reservoirs requires the ability to model multicomponent diffusion accurately. The proposed CVD method provides such modeling capabilities. Our modeling and experimental work indicate the novelty of the CVD method to determine the diffusion coefficients of a system where diffusion is the dominant displacement mechanism. The fact that the oil is contained within a low-permeability-chalk sample reduces density-driven convection that could result because of nonmonotonic oil-density changes as CO2 dissolves into the oil.


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