Modelling of Imbibition Relative Permeability by Direct Quasi-Static Approach
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
Standard
2016. Paper presented at International Symposium of the Society of Core Analysts, Snowmass, Colorado, United States.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Author
Bibtex - Download
}
RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download
TY - CONF
T1 - Modelling of Imbibition Relative Permeability by Direct Quasi-Static Approach
AU - Berg, S.
AU - Rücker, M.
AU - Ott, Holger
AU - Georgiadis, A.
AU - van der Linde, H.
AU - Enzmann, F.
AU - Kersten, M.
AU - Armstrong, R. T.
AU - de With, S.
AU - Becker, J.
AU - Wiegmann, A.
N1 - SCA-007
PY - 2016/8/21
Y1 - 2016/8/21
N2 - Relative permeability from a quasi-static pore scale modelling approach conducted directly on the pore space of rock have been compared with relative permeability computed from 3D fluid distributions obtained from a 2-phase flow experiment under dynamic conditions imaged with synchrotron beamline-based fast X-ray computed tomography. The comparison shows good agreement between connected pathway flow simulations conducted directly on the 3D fluid distribution obtained from the synchrotron beamline experiment on Gildehauser sandstone rock with a conventional “special core analysis” steady-state relative permeability measurement on a twin-sample. A quasi-static morphological approach to model pore scale fluid distributions, however, shows large discrepancy with the experimental data. The issue with quasi-static methods is not so much the modelling of the Navier-Stokes flow, but rather the description of the pore scale fluid configurations resulting from immiscible displacement events. Cooperative, nonlocal displacement events are not captured by quasi-static modeling approaches, which operate entirely in the capillary regime. Respective pore scale fluid distributions are significantly different from experimental measurements. As a consequence also therespective relative permeability is significantly different than those observed in the experiment. Therefore, ultimately only dynamic approaches are really able to correctly describe the pore scale displacements and respective pore-scale fluid configurations which are imperative for the correct description of phase connectivity, fluxes of connected and disconnected phases and ultimately relative permeability.
AB - Relative permeability from a quasi-static pore scale modelling approach conducted directly on the pore space of rock have been compared with relative permeability computed from 3D fluid distributions obtained from a 2-phase flow experiment under dynamic conditions imaged with synchrotron beamline-based fast X-ray computed tomography. The comparison shows good agreement between connected pathway flow simulations conducted directly on the 3D fluid distribution obtained from the synchrotron beamline experiment on Gildehauser sandstone rock with a conventional “special core analysis” steady-state relative permeability measurement on a twin-sample. A quasi-static morphological approach to model pore scale fluid distributions, however, shows large discrepancy with the experimental data. The issue with quasi-static methods is not so much the modelling of the Navier-Stokes flow, but rather the description of the pore scale fluid configurations resulting from immiscible displacement events. Cooperative, nonlocal displacement events are not captured by quasi-static modeling approaches, which operate entirely in the capillary regime. Respective pore scale fluid distributions are significantly different from experimental measurements. As a consequence also therespective relative permeability is significantly different than those observed in the experiment. Therefore, ultimately only dynamic approaches are really able to correctly describe the pore scale displacements and respective pore-scale fluid configurations which are imperative for the correct description of phase connectivity, fluxes of connected and disconnected phases and ultimately relative permeability.
M3 - Paper
T2 - International Symposium of the Society of Core Analysts
Y2 - 21 August 2016 through 26 August 2016
ER -