Reservoir Rock Properties Interfecial Tention, Wetability and Capillary Presure
Reservoir Rock Properties Interfecial Tention, Wetability and Capillary Presure
Reservoir Rock Properties Interfecial Tention, Wetability and Capillary Presure
CAPILLARY PRESURE
Displacement by imbibitions
B A
A = advancing
d i contact anglel (i.e.
(i Wetting
i phase
h i advancing)
is d i )
occurs when fluid B (non-wetting phase) is displaced by fluid A
(the wetting phase)
can be caused by a decrease Pnw
2 cos A
In general it can be stated that: (P )
c imb =
r
A E R
therefore,
A R
and,
(Pc)drainage (Pc)imbibition
Displacement/Mobilization of an Oil Blob
Capillary tube of constant diameter
For the oil droplet to be displaced there must be a pressure drop,
P, to overcome the capillary forces, where the magnitude of the
pressure drop from capillary pressure across the interfaces is,
P Pc dr Pc imb
2 (cos R cos A )
P
r
2 cos R 2 cos A
Pmobilization
r1 r2
Capillary Pressure
Where, 1 1
Pc =
r1 r2
Pc = the capillary pressure
= the surface tension or the interfacial tension
r1, r2 = the principle radii of curvature
Any curved surface is characterized by two principle radii of
curvature
t r11 andd r2.
2
The radii of curvature at a point, P, on the surface lie on two
planes that are perpendicular to each other and are intersecting
at this point P
Capillary Pressure Contd
Consider
C id a capillary
ill with
i h a circular
i l cross-section:
i
1 1
Pc =
r = radius perpendicular to tube wall r1 r2
R = radius perpendicular to the meniscus
If the capillary
p y is small,, it can be assumed that:
the meniscus is spherical, then r1 = r2 = r, and
geometrical
considerations give that . Thus, the capillary pressure
in a tube is defined as:
R
2 cos or 2 cos
P = h= r
r rg
Drainage Displacement Mechanisms
as Illustrated in a Pore Doublet Model
Imbibition Mechanisms as Illustrated in a Pore Doublet Model
Water-wet system:
krw = kro at Sw > 0.5,
krw at S*or
S* iis lless than
h 0.3
0 3 (S*or
(S* isi the
h waterflood
fl d residual
id l
oil saturation),
The amount of connate water saturation,
saturation Swc, is usually
greater than 20% (Swc 20 to 25% PV) and has an effect on
relative permeability behaviour,
(kro)primary drainage > (kro)imbibition for the same Sw,
The krw curve exhibits no hysteresis (e.g., (krw)
pd = (krw)imb),
As ppermeabilityy increases, (k
( rw/kro) becomes higher
g for a
given saturation.
Oil-wet system:
NEUT RAL W ET
Wate r We tting Inde x N e utrality
W EAKL Y W EAKL Y
W AT ER W ET O IL W ET
M IX ED W ET
1 W AT ER W ET
O IL W ET
0
Water Sensitivity
Refers to stability of clays and other minerals against exposure
to fresh water
Clay
Cl swelling
lli
Fines migration
Fluid Saturation
Average saturation
Point value of saturation
Saturation constraint
S w + S o + Sg = 1
kdP
V =
Where,
x
dx
= density of gas and for steady state flow
Vx = mass of gas = constant
Flow of Gases Contd
Darcys Law for gases
k ( P22 P12 ) k ( Pm P )
V2 = ( ) = ( )
2 P2 L P2 L
Where,
(P1+P2)/2 is the algebraic mean
P1 (upstream pressure)
P2 ((downstream ppressure))
V2 = velocity of gas
V 2 P2 L b
k = = k (1 + )
P Pm Pm
Where,
Where
b = Klinkenberg constant, characteristic
off the
h gas andd the
h porous medium,
di
k = absolute of Klinkenberg effect
corrected permeability,
k = measured p permeability
y using
g the
Darcy equation for gas flow,