SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 3,
September 2012,
pp. 903-911
Summary
A series of injection experiments was conducted in a Hele-Shaw cell-like
radial-flow device filled with fine sands to better understand the fundamental
failure/flow mechanisms when dense granular media were invaded and displaced by
a fluid. Both aqueous glycerin solutions and polyacrylamide solutions were used
as the invading fluid. The experimental findings suggest that as the injection
velocity and fluid viscosity (or polymer concentration) increase, there is a
transition from the solid-like to the fluid-like behavior in the granular media
response. On the basis of the patterns of grain displacements and fluid flow,
four distinct failure/flow regimes can be identified from the experiments: the
simple radial-flow regime, the infiltration- or leakoff-dominated regime, the
grain-displacement-dominated regime, and the viscous-fingering-dominated
regime. These failure/flow patterns emerge as a result of competition among
various forms of energy dissipation (i.e., viscous dissipation through flow in
porous media, dissipation by means of grain displacements, and viscous
dissipation through flow in thin channels).
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
24 November 2010
- Meeting paper published:
25 January 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
28 October 2011
- Manuscript approved:
8 November 2011
- Published online:
18 June 2012
- Version of record:
12 September 2012