permeability heterogeneity
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

89
(FIVE YEARS 21)

H-INDEX

17
(FIVE YEARS 1)

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengdong Yuan ◽  
Wanfen Pu ◽  
Mikhail Alekseevich Varfolomeev ◽  
Aidar Zamilevich Mustafin ◽  
Tao Tan ◽  
...  

Abstract How to control excessive water production in high-temperature and high-salinity reservoirs has always been a challenge, which has been facing many oil reservoirs in Tarim Basin (China), such as Y2 reservoir with an average temperature of 107 ℃, salinity of 213900 mg/L (Ca2++Mg2+>11300mg/L), and permeability from 2 to 2048 mD. In this work, we present experimental studies to determine the potential EOR process for Y2 reservoir from foam flooding, polymer gel/foam flooding, and microgel/surfactant flooding. To simulate the permeability heterogeneity of Y2 reservoir, a 2-D sand-pack model was used for flooding experiments. Vertically, three layers (first 0.6cm, second 0.8cm and third 1.6cm from top to bottom, respectively) were packed with different size sand to simulate permeability heterogeneity (permeability increases from first to third layer). A 0.3 cm higher permeability zone was also filled inside third layer. Horizontally, permeability gradually decreases from middle to two sides. In this model, injection well was vertical, and production well was horizontal. The effect of impermeable interlayer was also studied by isolating the second and third layer. The results show that conformance treatments using in-situ crosslinked gel or micro-gel are necessary before foam or surfactant injection under a high permeability heterogeneity. When an impermeable interlayer existed between the second and third layer, the additional oil recovery of N2 foam flooding, in-situ crosslinked gel/N2 foam flooding, and microgel/surfactant flooding was 16.34%, 20.37%, 17.50%, respectively, which was much higher than that without impermeable interlayer (9.84%, 13.62%, 12.07%). This implies that when multiple layers exist, crossflow between layers is unfavorable for improving oil recovery, which should be paid extra attention in EOR process. Foam flooding has not only a good mobility control capacity but also a good oil displacement ability (verified by visual observations of washed sand after experiments), which, together with the strong conformance control ability of crosslinked gel, makes in-situ crosslinked gel/N2 foam flooding yield the highest displacement efficiency. Generally, for high-temperature and ultra-high-salinity reservoirs with strong heterogeneity like Y2 reservoir, in-situ crosslinked gel/foam flooding can be a good candidate for EOR. This work provides a potential EOR method with high efficiency, i.e. in-situ crosslinked gel assisted N2 foam flooding, for the development of similar reservoirs like Y2 with high temperature, ultra-high salinity, high heterogeneity and multiple layers. Moreover, this work also highlights that, despite that foam has the ability of mobility and profile control, a conformance treatment is necessary to block high permeability zone before foam injection when the reservoirs has a strong heterogeneity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Bonazzi ◽  
M. Morvillo ◽  
J. Im ◽  
B. Jha ◽  
F. P. J. de Barros

Author(s):  
Alexander C. Monsees ◽  
Benjamin Busch ◽  
Christoph Hilgers

AbstractAuthigenic minerals formed during diagenesis in conjunction with compaction by burial have long been known to lead to porosity-loss of sandstones, and a subsequent deterioration in reservoir quality. The diagenetic impact on reservoir quality and permeability heterogeneity measured horizontal and vertical to bedding was characterized in three fluvio-eolian Lower Permian Rotliegend outcrops from the Flechtingen High, the northern Hesse Basin (both Germany) and the Vale of Eden (UK) using point-counting, polarized light-microscopy, helium pycnometry and permeability measurements. Results show significant porosity (10 to 35%) and permeability (0.01 to 10,000 mD) ranges largely independent of depositional environment. The major control on reservoir quality in Cornberg Sandstones are dolomite and siderite cementation in conjunction with illitization and illite and kaolinite cementation, leading together with quartz cementation to a mostly cemented IGV and poorest reservoir quality (avg. horizontal permeability: 0.96 mD). Flechtingen Sandstones are most intensely compacted due to the lack of significant early diagenetic cement phases and continuous illitic grain-to-grain coatings, which inhibited intense quartz cementation but enhanced chemical compaction at quartz grain contacts, resulting in intermediate reservoir quality (avg. horizontal permeability: 34.9 mD). Penrith Sandstones lack significant authigenic phases besides quartz due to carbonate dissolution during uplift. They show the least amount of detrital feldspars and clay minerals, leading to no major reservoir quality reduction by burial diagenetic clay mineral alterations, resulting in the highest reservoir quality (avg. horizontal permeability: 5900 mD). Additional results highlight higher horizontal to vertical permeability ratios kh/kv in less homogeneous sandstones of < 10 mD of 10, and in more homogenous, higher permeable sandstones > 1000 mD of 1. Although detrital and authigenic sample compositions vary throughout the studied areas, the general effect of grain coatings coverages on syntaxial cement inhibition and chemical compaction can be delineated. This study increases the understanding of porosity reduction in sandstones, as it confirms the necessity to differentiate between the illitic grain-to-grain coatings and illitic grain-to-IGV coatings. As a result, the enhancing effect of illite on chemical compaction on quartz grain-grain boundaries can be better constrained, as well as the effect of grain coatings on quartz cementation. This is relevant for reservoir quality and risk assessment in hydrocarbon and geothermal plays as well as in storage.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 744
Author(s):  
Yuchao Zeng ◽  
Fangdi Sun ◽  
Haizhen Zhai

Because geologic sedimentation and hydrofracturing processes are not homogeneous, the reservoirs of enhanced geothermal systems (EGSs) are also heterogeneous; this has a significant influence on the electricity generation performance of EGS. Presently, there are a lack of systematic and profound studies on the effect of vertical permeability heterogeneity in stratified formation on the electricity generation performance of EGS. In order to uncover the effect of vertical permeability heterogeneity on electricity generation performance of EGS, in this work we analyzed the influence of vertical permeability heterogeneity on electricity generation performance of EGS through a numerical method based on geological data at the Yangbajing geothermal field. The results indicate that when the average permeability of stratified formations is constant for a homogeneous reservoir, the system attains maximum water production rate, maximum electric power, minimum reservoir impedance and maximum pump power; with the increasing of the vertical permeability heterogeneity, the water production rate gradually decreases, the electric power gradually declines, the reservoir impedance gradually increases and the pump power gradually declines. When the average permeability of stratified formations is constant, with the increasing of the vertical permeability heterogeneity, the injection pressure and energy efficiency only changes very slightly; this indicates that the vertical permeability heterogeneity is not the main factor affecting the system injection pressure and energy efficiency.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Mohamed Elsafih ◽  
Mashhad Fahes

Summary It is common to inject acidic stimulation fluids into oil-bearing carbonate formations to enhance well productivity. This process of matrix acidizing is designed to maximize the propagation of wormholes into the formation by optimizing the injection parameters, including acid-injection rate and volume. Previous studies have suggested that saturation conditions, permeability, heterogeneity, temperature, and pressure can significantly affect the design of matrix-acidizing treatments. However, laboratory studies’ results are inconsistent in their conclusions and are mostly limited to water-saturated cores. In this work, we designed a systematic experimental study to evaluate the impact of multiphase flow on the acidizing process when injecting 15 wt% hydrochloric acid (HCl) into crude-oil-saturated Indiana Limestone cores. The results reveal the following: Contrary to published literature for water-saturated cores, acidizing in partially oil-saturatedhigh-permeability cores at high pressure requires less acid volume than in low-permeability cores; lower-pressure acid injection results in more efficient wormhole propagation in low-permeability cores compared to high-pressure acid injection; acidizing in low- and high-permeability cores at low pressure leads to similar efficiency; and wormholing is more effective in partially oil-saturated cores, resulting in multiple parallel branches as compared to inefficient leakoff in water-saturatedcores.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Pauline Mourlanette

Uncertainties related to permeability heterogeneity can be estimated using geostatistical simulation methods. Usually, these methods are applied on regular grids with cells of constant size, whereas unstructured grids are more flexible to honor geological structures and offer local refinements for fluid-flow simulations. However, cells of different sizes require to account for the support dependency of permeability statistics (support effect). This work presents a novel workflow based on the power averaging technique. The averaging exponent ω is estimated using a response surface calibrated from numerical upscaling experiments. Using spectral turning bands, permeability is simulated on points in each unstructured cell, and later averaged with a local value of ω that depends on the cell size and shape, but also on the proportion of each facies inside the cell. The method is first illustrated on a synthetic case, with a single facies. The simulation of a tracer experiment is used to compare this novel geostatistical simulation method with a conventional approach based on a fine scale Cartesian grid. The results show the consistency of both the simulated permeability fields and the tracer breakthrough curves. The application to an industrial case with two facies is then presented and shows both consistent permeability fields and computational costs acceptable for the industry. Indeed, the computational cost for several realizations is much lower than the conventional approach based on a pressure-solver upscaling. The method works for the presented cases, but its theoretical ro-bustness can still be improved. A discussion on pressure solver upscal-ing parameters selection and power averaging limits is available in the conclusion, as well as a few research perspectives on multiple facies and non stationary proportions inclusion, the management of anisotropy and the extension to multiphase flow.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document