Characterization of Liquid Bridge in Gas/Oil Gravity Drainage in Fractured Reservoirs

Gravity drainage is the main mechanism which controls the oil recovery from fractured reservoirs in both gas-cap drive and gas injection processes. The liquid bridge formed between two adjacent matrix blocks is responsible for capillary continuity phenomenon. The accurate determination of gas-liquid...

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Main Authors: Behrouz Harimi, Mohsen Masihi, Mohammad Hosein Ghazanfari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Petroleum University of Technology 2019-04-01
Series:Iranian Journal of Oil & Gas Science and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ijogst.put.ac.ir/article_89940_b21d9af3a5c924ccd5f247f5a6a27038.pdf
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spelling doaj-89783139895a4341b573008659f380412020-11-25T04:10:48ZengPetroleum University of TechnologyIranian Journal of Oil & Gas Science and Technology2345-24122345-24202019-04-0182739110.22050/ijogst.2018.140366.146589940Characterization of Liquid Bridge in Gas/Oil Gravity Drainage in Fractured ReservoirsBehrouz Harimi0Mohsen Masihi1Mohammad Hosein Ghazanfari2Ph.D. Student, Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, IranProfessor, Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, IranAssociate Professor, Department of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, IranGravity drainage is the main mechanism which controls the oil recovery from fractured reservoirs in both gas-cap drive and gas injection processes. The liquid bridge formed between two adjacent matrix blocks is responsible for capillary continuity phenomenon. The accurate determination of gas-liquid interface profile of liquid bridge is crucial to predict fracture capillary pressure precisely. The liquid bridge interface profile in the absence and in the presence of gravity is numerically derived, and the obtained results are compared with the measured experimental data. It is shown that in the presence of gravity, fracture capillary pressure varies across the fracture, whereas, by ignoring gravitational effects, a constant capillary pressure is obtained for the whole fracture. Critical fracture aperture which is the maximum aperture that could retain a liquid bridge was computed for a range of liquid bridge volumes and contact angles. Then, non-linear regression was conducted on the obtained dataset to find an empirical relation for the prediction of critical fracture aperture as a function of liquid bridge volume and contact angle. The computation of fracture capillary pressure at different liquid bridge volumes, fracture apertures, and contact angles demonstrates that if the liquid bridge volume is sufficiently small (say less than 0.5 microliters), capillary pressure in a horizontal fracture may reach values more than 0.1 psi, which is comparable to capillary pressure in the matrix blocks. The obtained results reveal that the variation of fracture capillary pressure versus bridge volume (which represents liquid saturation in fracture) obeys a trend similar to the case of matrix capillary pressure. Therefore, the capillary pressure of matrix can be applied directly to fractures considering proper modifications. The results of this study emphasize the importance of capillary continuity created by liquid bridges in the performance of gas-oil gravity drainage in fractured reservoirs.http://ijogst.put.ac.ir/article_89940_b21d9af3a5c924ccd5f247f5a6a27038.pdffractured reservoirgravity drainagecapillary continuityliquid bridgefracture capillary pressure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Behrouz Harimi
Mohsen Masihi
Mohammad Hosein Ghazanfari
spellingShingle Behrouz Harimi
Mohsen Masihi
Mohammad Hosein Ghazanfari
Characterization of Liquid Bridge in Gas/Oil Gravity Drainage in Fractured Reservoirs
Iranian Journal of Oil & Gas Science and Technology
fractured reservoir
gravity drainage
capillary continuity
liquid bridge
fracture capillary pressure
author_facet Behrouz Harimi
Mohsen Masihi
Mohammad Hosein Ghazanfari
author_sort Behrouz Harimi
title Characterization of Liquid Bridge in Gas/Oil Gravity Drainage in Fractured Reservoirs
title_short Characterization of Liquid Bridge in Gas/Oil Gravity Drainage in Fractured Reservoirs
title_full Characterization of Liquid Bridge in Gas/Oil Gravity Drainage in Fractured Reservoirs
title_fullStr Characterization of Liquid Bridge in Gas/Oil Gravity Drainage in Fractured Reservoirs
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of Liquid Bridge in Gas/Oil Gravity Drainage in Fractured Reservoirs
title_sort characterization of liquid bridge in gas/oil gravity drainage in fractured reservoirs
publisher Petroleum University of Technology
series Iranian Journal of Oil & Gas Science and Technology
issn 2345-2412
2345-2420
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Gravity drainage is the main mechanism which controls the oil recovery from fractured reservoirs in both gas-cap drive and gas injection processes. The liquid bridge formed between two adjacent matrix blocks is responsible for capillary continuity phenomenon. The accurate determination of gas-liquid interface profile of liquid bridge is crucial to predict fracture capillary pressure precisely. The liquid bridge interface profile in the absence and in the presence of gravity is numerically derived, and the obtained results are compared with the measured experimental data. It is shown that in the presence of gravity, fracture capillary pressure varies across the fracture, whereas, by ignoring gravitational effects, a constant capillary pressure is obtained for the whole fracture. Critical fracture aperture which is the maximum aperture that could retain a liquid bridge was computed for a range of liquid bridge volumes and contact angles. Then, non-linear regression was conducted on the obtained dataset to find an empirical relation for the prediction of critical fracture aperture as a function of liquid bridge volume and contact angle. The computation of fracture capillary pressure at different liquid bridge volumes, fracture apertures, and contact angles demonstrates that if the liquid bridge volume is sufficiently small (say less than 0.5 microliters), capillary pressure in a horizontal fracture may reach values more than 0.1 psi, which is comparable to capillary pressure in the matrix blocks. The obtained results reveal that the variation of fracture capillary pressure versus bridge volume (which represents liquid saturation in fracture) obeys a trend similar to the case of matrix capillary pressure. Therefore, the capillary pressure of matrix can be applied directly to fractures considering proper modifications. The results of this study emphasize the importance of capillary continuity created by liquid bridges in the performance of gas-oil gravity drainage in fractured reservoirs.
topic fractured reservoir
gravity drainage
capillary continuity
liquid bridge
fracture capillary pressure
url http://ijogst.put.ac.ir/article_89940_b21d9af3a5c924ccd5f247f5a6a27038.pdf
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