Pore-scale mechanism of coupled pressure-driven flow and spontaneous imbibition in porous media during high-pressure water injection processes

Authors

  • Debin Kong* School of Civil and Resources Engineering, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, P. R. China(Email: kongdb@ustb.edu.cn)
  • Yingfeng Peng PetroChina Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration & Development, Beijing 100083, P. R. China ;State Key Laboratory of Continental Shale Oil, Daqing 163412, P. R. China
  • Zhenyu Zhou School of Civil and Resources Engineering, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, P. R. China
  • Huanhuan Peng PetroChina Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration & Development, Beijing 100083, P. R. China
  • Zhewei Chen PetroChina Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration & Development, Beijing 100083, P. R. China ;State Key Laboratory of Continental Shale Oil, Daqing 163412, P. R. China

Keywords:

High-pressure water injection, pressure-driven flow, spontaneous imbibition, residual oil

Abstract

During the development of low-permeability oil fields, high-pressure water injection is employed as a means of increasing reservoir pressure and enhancing oil recovery. This process features an interplay between pressure-driven flow and spontaneous imbibition, which exerts a pivotal influence on the distribution of oil and water. To describe the dynamics of this interplay, pore-scale visualization experiments and core flooding online nuclear magnetic resonance experiments were conducted in the present work. The results demonstrate that after water flooding, residual oil predominantly exists in clustered forms. Initially, during high-pressure water injection and the early stages of well shut-in, crude oil movement is driven primarily by pressure. As the process continues, however, a spontaneous imbibition mechanism driven by capillary forces becomes the predominant force, which results in the transformation of clustered residual oil into various mobilizable forms. This reorganization of residual oil is a migration pattern from smaller to larger pores, facilitated by spontaneous imbibition.

Document Type: Original article

Cited as: Kong, D., Peng, Y., Zhou, Z., Peng, H., Chen, Z. Pore-scale mechanism of coupled pressure-driven flow and spontaneous imbibition in porous media during high-pressure water injection processes. Capillarity, 2024, 13(2): 29-36. https://doi.org/10.46690/capi.2024.11.01

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Published

2024-09-10

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