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Cocurrent Spontaneous Imbibition In Porous Media With the Dynamics of Viscous Coupling and Capillary Backpressure

Andersen, Pål Østebø; Qiao, Yangyang ORCID iD icon; Standnes, Dag Chun; Evje, Steinar

Abstract:

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). ... mehr


Originalveröffentlichung
DOI: 10.2118/190267-PA
Scopus
Zitationen: 46
Web of Science
Zitationen: 34
Dimensions
Zitationen: 37
Zugehörige Institution(en) am KIT Institut für Angewandte Geowissenschaften (AGW)
Publikationstyp Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Publikationsdatum 13.02.2019
Sprache Englisch
Identifikator ISSN: 1086-055X, 1930-0220
KITopen-ID: 1000190064
Erschienen in SPE Journal
Verlag Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)
Band 24
Heft 1
Seiten 158–177
Vorab online veröffentlicht am 26.08.2018
Schlagwörter Upstream Oil & Gas, relative permeability, imbibition, Artificial Intelligence, viscosity, countercurrent production, saturation, spontaneous imbibition, enhanced recovery, Fluid Dynamics
Nachgewiesen in Scopus
Web of Science
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