Summary
CO2 injection has been applied in naturally fractured reservoirs
(NFRs) for the purpose of enhanced oil recovery (i.e., the Weyburn and Midale
fields, Canada; the Wasson and Slaughter fields, USA; and the Bati Raman field,
Turkey). The matrix part of these types of reservoirs could potentially be a
good storage medium as well. Understanding the matrix/fracture interaction
during this process and the dynamics of the flow in this dual-porosity system
requires visual analyses. We mimicked fully miscible CO2 injection
in NFRs using 2D models with a single fracture and oil (solute)/hydrocarbon
solvent pairs. The focus was on the visual pore-scale analysis of miscibility
interaction, breakthrough of solvent through fracture, transfer between matrix
and fracture, and the dynamics of miscible displacement inside the matrix.
First, matrix/fracture interaction was studied intensively using 2D
glass-bead models experimentally. The model was prepared using acrylic sheets
and glass beads saturated with oil as a porous medium while a narrow gap of
1-mm size containing filter paper served as a fracture. The first contact
miscible solvent (pentane) was injected into the fracture, and the flow
distribution was monitored using an image-acquisition and -processing system.
The produced solvent and solute were continuously analyzed for compositional
study. The effects of several parameters, such as flow rate, viscosity ratio
(oil/solvent), and gravity, were studied. Next, the process was modeled
numerically using a commercial compositional simulator, and the saturation
distribution in the matrix was matched to experimental data. The key parameters
in the matching process were the effective diffusion coefficients and the
longitudinal and the transverse dispersivities. The diffusion coefficients were
specified for each fluid, and dispersivities were assigned into gridblocks
separately for the fracture and the matrix.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
1,326 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
12 August 2008
- Meeting paper published:
11 October 2008
- Revised manuscript received:
17 February 2009
- Manuscript approved:
27 February 2009
- Published online:
4 February 2010
- Version of record:
24 February 2010