SPE Journal
Volume 18,
Number 2,
April 2013,
pp. 285-295
Summary
Oil reservoirs have structural heterogeneities across multiple length scales
and, particularly in carbonates, complexly distributed wettabilities. The
interplay of structural and wettability heterogeneities is the fundamental
control for sweep efficiency and oil recovery. This interplay must be captured
in physically robust flow functions, such as relative permeability and
capillary pressure functions. Such flow functions then allow us to choose the
best improved-oil-recovery (IOR) or enhanced-oil-recovery (EOR) process and
forecast oil recovery with adequate precision. Obtaining flow functions for
reservoir rocks with varying wettability is a challenging task, especially when
three fluid phases coexist. In this work, we use pore-network modeling, a
reliable and physically based simulation tool, to predict three-phase flow
functions. We have developed a new pore-scale network model for rocks with
variable wettability. Unlike other models, this model combines three new and
important features. (1) Our network model comprises a novel thermodynamic
criterion for the formation and collapse of oil layers. This captures
film/layer flow of oil adequately, which affects the oil relative permeability
at low oil saturation. We can therefore predict residual oil more accurately.
(2) We implemented multiple displacement chains, in which injection of one
phase at the inlet triggers a chain of interface displacements throughout the
network. This allows us to accurately model the mobilization of disconnected
phase clusters that arise during higher-order [water-alternating-gas (WAG)]
floods. Again, this feature is key to a better prediction of residual oil
saturation (ROS). (3) Our model takes realistic 3D pore networks extracted from
pore-space reconstruction methods and X-ray computerizedtomography (CT) images
as input. This preserves both topology and pore shape of the rock, providing
better estimates of phase conductivities and relative permeability. We have
validated our model by use of available experimental data for a range of
wettabilities and demonstrated the impact of single vs. multiple displacement
on residual oil. We also used a proof-of concept study in which we use flow
functions for different wettabilities that have been computed with our model in
field-scale reservoir simulations to forecast oil recovery during tertiary gas
injection. These results are compared with predictions that used empirical flow
functions. Flow functions computed by our network model gave higher oil
recovery than corresponding flow functions calculated by empirical models; oil
recovery increases with decreasing water-wetness. This shows that the
pore-scale physics encapsulated in our new network model leads to the right
emergent behavior at the reservoir scale.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
30 July 2011
- Meeting paper published:
9 October 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
9 October 2012
- Manuscript approved:
12 October 2012
- Published online:
28 December 2012
- Version of record:
5 April 2013