SPE Journal
Volume 18,
Number 1,
February 2013,
pp. 27-37
Summary
Fluid mechanics of natural gas in organic-rich shale involves nanoscale
phenomena that could lead to potential non-Darcy effects during gas production.
In general, these are low-Reynolds number and noncontinuum effects and, more
importantly, porewall-dominated multiscale effects. In this study, we introduce
a new lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) to investigate these effects numerically
in simple pore geometries. The standard method was developed in the 1980s to
overcome the weaknesses of lattice gas cellular automata and has emerged
recently as a powerful tool to solve fluid dynamics problems, in particular in
the areas of micro- and nanofluidics. The new approach takes into account
molecular-level interactions by use of adsorptive/cohesive forces among the
fluid particles and defining a Langmuir-slip boundary condition at the organic
pore walls. The model allows us to partition mass transport by the walls into
two components: slippage of free gas molecules and hopping (or surface
transport) of the adsorbed gas molecules. By use of the standard 2D D2Q9
lattice, low-Reynolds-number gas dynamics is simulated in a 100-nm model
organic capillary and later in a bundle of smaller-sized organic nanotubes. The
results point to the existence of a critical Knudsen number value for the onset
of laminar gas flow under typical shale-gas-reservoir pressure conditions.
Beyond this number, the predicted velocity profile shows that the mechanisms of
slippage and surface transport could lead to molecular streaming by the pore
walls, which enhances the gas transport in the organic nanopores. The work is
important for development of new-generation shale-gas-reservoir flow
simulators, and it can be used in the laboratory for organic-rich-shale
characterization.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
29 June 2011
- Meeting paper published:
31 October 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
30 June 2012
- Manuscript approved:
7 July 2012
- Published online:
1 November 2012
- Version of record:
28 February 2013