SPE Journal
Volume 18,
Number 1,
February 2013,
pp. 38-49
Summary
In this study, single-phase gas-flow simulation that considers slippage
effects through a network of slots and microfractures is presented. The
statistical parameters for network construction were extracted from
petrographic work in tight porous media of the Nikanassin Group in the Western
Canada Sedimentary Basin (WCSB). Furthermore, correlations between Klinkenberg
slippage effect and absolute permeability have been developed as well as a new
unified flow model in which Knudsen number acts implicitly as a flow-regime
indicator. A detailed understanding of fluid flow at microscale levels in tight
porous media is essential to establish and develop techniques for economic flow
rate and recovery. Choosing an appropriate equation for flow through a single
element of the network is crucial; this equation must include geometry and
other structural features that affect the flow as well as all variation of
fluid properties with pressure. Disregarding these details in a single element
of porous media can easily lead to flow misinterpretation at the macroscopic
scale. Because of the wide flow-path-size distribution in tight porous media, a
variety of flow regimes can exist in the equivalent network. Two distinct flow
regimes, viscous flow and free molecular flow, are in either side of this
flow-regime spectrum. Because the nature of these two types of flow is
categorically different, finding/adjusting a unified flow model is problematic.
The complication stems from the fact that the viscosity concept misses its
meaning as the flow regime changes from viscous to free molecular flow in which
a diffusion-like mechanism dominates. For each specified flow regime, the
appropriate equations for different geometries are studied. In addition,
different unified flow models available in the literature are critically
investigated. Simulation of gas flow through the constructed network at
different mean flow pressures leads to investigating the functionality of the
Klinkenberg factor with permeability of the porous media and pore-level
structure.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
17 August 2011
- Meeting paper published:
15 November 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
20 July 2012
- Manuscript approved:
26 July 2012
- Published online:
28 December 2012
- Version of record:
27 February 2013