Analysis of gas transport behavior in organic and inorganic nanopores based on a unified apparent gas permeability model

Abstract Different from the conventional gas reservoirs, gas transport in nanoporous shales is complicated due to multiple transport mechanisms and reservoir characteristics. In this work, we presented a unified apparent gas permeability model for real gas transport in organic and inorganic nanopore...

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Main Authors: Qi Zhang, Wen-Dong Wang, Yilihamu Kade, Bo-Tao Wang, Lei Xiong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-09-01
Series:Petroleum Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12182-019-00358-4
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spelling doaj-821f984c5a1643c79534734f2006f2d32020-11-25T03:17:15ZengSpringerOpenPetroleum Science1672-51071995-82262019-09-0117116818110.1007/s12182-019-00358-4Analysis of gas transport behavior in organic and inorganic nanopores based on a unified apparent gas permeability modelQi Zhang0Wen-Dong Wang1Yilihamu Kade2Bo-Tao Wang3Lei Xiong4Key Laboratory of Tectonics and Petroleum Resources, China University of GeosciencesSchool of Petroleum Engineering, China University of Petroleum (East China)Institute of Ground Engineering, Engineering Technology Research Institute of PetroChina Xinjiang Oilfield CompanyOil Production Plant 5 of PetroChina Changqing Oilfield CompanyOil Production Plant 1 of PetroChina Xinjiang Oilfield CompanyAbstract Different from the conventional gas reservoirs, gas transport in nanoporous shales is complicated due to multiple transport mechanisms and reservoir characteristics. In this work, we presented a unified apparent gas permeability model for real gas transport in organic and inorganic nanopores, considering real gas effect, organic matter (OM) porosity, Knudsen diffusion, surface diffusion, and stress dependence. Meanwhile, the effects of monolayer and multilayer adsorption on gas transport are included. Then, we validated the model by experimental results. The influences of pore radius, pore pressure, OM porosity, temperature, and stress dependence on gas transport behavior and their contributions to the total apparent gas permeability (AGP) were analyzed. The results show that the adsorption effect causes Kn(OM) > Kn(IM) when the pore pressure is larger than 1 MPa and the pore radius is less than 100 nm. The ratio of the AGP over the intrinsic permeability decreases with an increase in pore radius or pore pressure. For nanopores with a radius of less than 10 nm, the effects of the OM porosity, surface diffusion coefficient, and temperature on gas transport cannot be negligible. Moreover, the surface diffusion almost dominates in nanopores with a radius less than 2 nm under high OM porosity conditions. For the small-radius and low-pressure conditions, gas transport is governed by the Knudsen diffusion in nanopores. This study focuses on revealing gas transport behavior in nanoporous shales.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12182-019-00358-4Gas transportApparent gas permeability modelGas adsorptionSurface diffusionStress dependence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Qi Zhang
Wen-Dong Wang
Yilihamu Kade
Bo-Tao Wang
Lei Xiong
spellingShingle Qi Zhang
Wen-Dong Wang
Yilihamu Kade
Bo-Tao Wang
Lei Xiong
Analysis of gas transport behavior in organic and inorganic nanopores based on a unified apparent gas permeability model
Petroleum Science
Gas transport
Apparent gas permeability model
Gas adsorption
Surface diffusion
Stress dependence
author_facet Qi Zhang
Wen-Dong Wang
Yilihamu Kade
Bo-Tao Wang
Lei Xiong
author_sort Qi Zhang
title Analysis of gas transport behavior in organic and inorganic nanopores based on a unified apparent gas permeability model
title_short Analysis of gas transport behavior in organic and inorganic nanopores based on a unified apparent gas permeability model
title_full Analysis of gas transport behavior in organic and inorganic nanopores based on a unified apparent gas permeability model
title_fullStr Analysis of gas transport behavior in organic and inorganic nanopores based on a unified apparent gas permeability model
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of gas transport behavior in organic and inorganic nanopores based on a unified apparent gas permeability model
title_sort analysis of gas transport behavior in organic and inorganic nanopores based on a unified apparent gas permeability model
publisher SpringerOpen
series Petroleum Science
issn 1672-5107
1995-8226
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract Different from the conventional gas reservoirs, gas transport in nanoporous shales is complicated due to multiple transport mechanisms and reservoir characteristics. In this work, we presented a unified apparent gas permeability model for real gas transport in organic and inorganic nanopores, considering real gas effect, organic matter (OM) porosity, Knudsen diffusion, surface diffusion, and stress dependence. Meanwhile, the effects of monolayer and multilayer adsorption on gas transport are included. Then, we validated the model by experimental results. The influences of pore radius, pore pressure, OM porosity, temperature, and stress dependence on gas transport behavior and their contributions to the total apparent gas permeability (AGP) were analyzed. The results show that the adsorption effect causes Kn(OM) > Kn(IM) when the pore pressure is larger than 1 MPa and the pore radius is less than 100 nm. The ratio of the AGP over the intrinsic permeability decreases with an increase in pore radius or pore pressure. For nanopores with a radius of less than 10 nm, the effects of the OM porosity, surface diffusion coefficient, and temperature on gas transport cannot be negligible. Moreover, the surface diffusion almost dominates in nanopores with a radius less than 2 nm under high OM porosity conditions. For the small-radius and low-pressure conditions, gas transport is governed by the Knudsen diffusion in nanopores. This study focuses on revealing gas transport behavior in nanoporous shales.
topic Gas transport
Apparent gas permeability model
Gas adsorption
Surface diffusion
Stress dependence
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12182-019-00358-4
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AT yilihamukade analysisofgastransportbehaviorinorganicandinorganicnanoporesbasedonaunifiedapparentgaspermeabilitymodel
AT botaowang analysisofgastransportbehaviorinorganicandinorganicnanoporesbasedonaunifiedapparentgaspermeabilitymodel
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