Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Residual Oil Formation in Carbonate Sample from the Middle East
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Rock Samples and Fluid
2.2. Experimental Procedure
- (1)
- The dry clean core plug was placed in the holder. The plug temperature and confining pressure were kept at 45 °C and 12 MPa, respectively, and stabilized for 5 h by using the back-pressure pump. The first micro-CT scan was performed on the dry plug. The dry scan was used for accurately mapping the pore space and generating porosity distribution along the field of views.
- (2)
- The core plug was vacuumed and was then flooded with 100 pore volume (PV) of brine at a constant injection rate of 0.02 mL/min. It was let to stand for 12 h to ensure that the core was fully saturated with brine before oil injection. This approach can make a chemical equilibrium between rock minerals and brine. The micro-CT scan of the same locations was performed twice.
- (3)
- Then, 100 PV of oil was injected through the core plug to establish a lower Swi. The core plug was flushed with the mineral oil for a total of 100 PV at 0.02 mL/min and the 3D tomograms were recorded at the same locations. The oil flooding takes more than 100 h, which can reduce the effect of flowing oil on slow.
- (4)
- Then, 20 PV at 0.02 mL/min of brine was injected through the core plug. The fourth micro-CT scan of the same locations was performed.
- (5)
- A total of 20 PV of brine was injected at the higher flow rate of 0.05 mL/min and the fifth CT scan at the same locations was conducted.
- (6)
- A total of 20 PV of brine was injected at the higher flow rate of 0.1 mL/min and the sixth CT scan at the same locations was conducted.
- (7)
- Finally, the core plug was flooded with 20 PV of brine at the flow rate of 0.5 mL/min to establish a residual oil state. The seventh micro-CT scan of the same locations was performed.
2.3. Image Processing
2.3.1. Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio
2.3.2. Image Sharpness Evaluation Function
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Representative Elementary Volume
3.2. Microscopic Pore Structure
3.3. Variation Characteristics of Remaining Oil Distribution in Sub-Resolution Pore Throats
3.4. Morphology of Oil Cluster in Macro-Pores
3.4.1. Effect of PV on Remaining Oil
3.4.2. Influence of Micropore
3.5. Variation of Residual Oil Saturation in Micro-Pores
4. Conclusions
- (1)
- Micro-pores govern the porosity of high-porosity and low-permeability carbonate reservoirs, while macro-pores control the porosity of high and high-permeability carbonate reservoirs;
- (2)
- The leftover oil in the micro-pores is initially displaced during brine flooding of carbonate reservoirs. When some of the remaining oil in the micro-pore is displaced, the micro-pores become connected to the macro-pores, and the remaining oil in the macro-pores is displaced;
- (3)
- The remaining oil in the micro-pores is preferentially displaced as the flow rate increases, and the capillary force is used as the displacement force. When the micro-pores link to the macro-pores, much of the remaining oil in the macro-pores is moved;
- (4)
- The image enhancement method improves the identification effect of the carbonate core’s pore throat. The recognition effect of Sample 1′s pore throat is 47.88 times and 10,443.38 times greater than before treatment; Sample 2′s recognition effect is 9.09 times and 92.76 times greater than before treatment. This method’s effect is clearly superior to that of hypertonic samples in hypotonic samples;
- (5)
- The remaining oil content gradually diminishes as displacement velocity increases. When a particular speed is reached, the influence of continual displacement speed improvement on the total remaining oil is lessened.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Core Number | Reservoir Type | Wettability | Permeability/mD | Helium Porosity/% |
---|---|---|---|---|
No. 1 | Low permeability | Water-wet | 6.00 | 4.55 |
No. 2 | High permeability | Water-wet | 311.9 | 26.35 |
Reconstruction Methods | Reconstruction Ratio | Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio | SMD |
---|---|---|---|
SRCNN | 2 | 6.23 | 8.34 |
4 | 22.67 | 16.25 | |
SRGAN | 2 | 2.77 | 3.16 |
4 | 18.23 | 10.23 | |
DBPI | 2 | 4.56 | 3.13 |
4 | 20.12 | 12.35 |
Sample 1 | Sample 2 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Pore | Throat | Pore | Throat | |
Before treatment | 1397 | 34 | 237 | 56 |
After treatment | 2899 | 1402 | 2154 | 5196 |
Effect | 47.88 | 10,443.38 | 9.09 | 92.79 |
Characterization Parameter | Calculation Formula | Physical Meaning |
---|---|---|
Shape Factor | The degree of similarity between the shape of a single piece of leftover oil and spheres. The value of the sphere is one, and the smaller the value, the closer the form is to a sphere, and the greater, the more irregular the shape | |
Euler Number | Reflect the pore number of single piece of remaining oil number. The smaller the value, the more the pore holes. | |
Contact Ratio | Provide the contact relationship between single piece of remaining oil and the hole wall. The smaller the contact ratio, the less the remaining oil adhering to pore surface. |
Core 1 | Core 2 | |
---|---|---|
0.02 mL/min | 49.34% | 56.11% |
0.5 mL/min | 36.25% | 46.32% |
Core 1 | Core 2 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Type | Volume Fraction | Pore Contribution Rate | Contribution to Total Porosity | Volume Fraction | Pore Contribution Rate | Contribution to Total Porosity |
Rock skeleton | 0.377 | 0 | 0 | 0.582 | 0 | 0 |
Micro-porous phase region | 0.552 | 0.130 | 0.072 | 0.408 | 0.176 | 0.072 |
Macro-pore area | 0.071 | 1 | 0.071 | 0.011 | 1 | 0.011 |
Overall porosity | 0.143 | 0.083 |
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Liu, Y.; Pi, J.; Tong, K. Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Residual Oil Formation in Carbonate Sample from the Middle East. Processes 2023, 11, 2289. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11082289
Liu Y, Pi J, Tong K. Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Residual Oil Formation in Carbonate Sample from the Middle East. Processes. 2023; 11(8):2289. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11082289
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Yongjie, Jian Pi, and Kaijun Tong. 2023. "Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Residual Oil Formation in Carbonate Sample from the Middle East" Processes 11, no. 8: 2289. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11082289
APA StyleLiu, Y., Pi, J., & Tong, K. (2023). Pore-Scale Experimental Investigation of the Residual Oil Formation in Carbonate Sample from the Middle East. Processes, 11(8), 2289. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11082289