Abstract

The flow of shale gas in nano scale pores is affected by multiple physical phenomena. At present, the influence of multiple physical phenomena on the transport mechanism of gas in nano-pores is not clear, and a unified mathematical model to describe these multiple physical phenomena is still not available. In this paper, an apparent permeability model was established, after comprehensively considering three gas flow mechanisms in shale matrix organic pores, including viscous slippage Flow, Knudsen diffusion and surface diffusion of adsorbed gas, and real gas effect and confinement effect, and at the same time considering the effects of matrix shrinkage, stress sensitivity, adsorption layer thinning, confinement effect and real gas effect on pore radius. The contribution of three flow mechanisms to apparent permeability under different pore pressure and pore size is analyzed. The effects of adsorption layer thinning, stress sensitivity, matrix shrinkage effect, real gas effect and confinement effect on apparent permeability were also systematically analyzed. The results show that the apparent permeability first decreases and then increases with the decrease of pore pressure. With the decrease of pore pressure, matrix shrinkage, Knudsen diffusion, slippage effect and surface diffusion effect increase gradually. These four effects will not only make up for the permeability loss caused by stress sensitivity and adsorption layer, but also significantly increase the permeability. With the decrease of pore radius, the contribution of slippage flow decreases, and the contributions of Knudsen diffusion and surface diffusion increase gradually. With the decrease of pore radius and the increase of pore pressure, the influence of real gas effect and confinement effect on permeability increases significantly. Considering real gas and confinement effect, the apparent permeability of pores with radius of 5 nm is increased by 13.2%, and the apparent permeability of pores with radius of 1 nm is increased by 61.3%. The apparent permeability model obtained in this paper can provide a theoretical basis for more accurate measurement of permeability of shale matrix and accurate evaluation of productivity of shale gas horizontal wells.

Highlights

  • Shale gas is an unconventional natural gas that is mainly stored in shale as adsorption gas and free gas

  • A apparent permeability model is established, after comprehensively considering three gas flow mechanisms in shale matrix organic pores, including viscous slippage flow, Knudsen diffusion and surface diffusion of adsorbed gas, and real gas effect and confinement effect, and at the same time considering the effects of matrix shrinkage, stress sensitivity, adsorption layer thinning, confinement effect and real gas effect on pore radius

  • Considering the effects of dynamic pore radius, real gas effect and confinement effect on gas transport, in the part, we will establish the mathematical models of slippage flow, Knudsen diffusion and surface diffusion respectively

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Shale gas is an unconventional natural gas that is mainly stored in shale as adsorption gas and free gas. Zhang Q. et al (2020) established a unified apparent permeability model for inorganic and organic matter by considering the effects of the adsorption layer, matrix shrinkage and stress sensitivity on the pore radius. A apparent permeability model is established, after comprehensively considering three gas flow mechanisms in shale matrix organic pores, including viscous slippage flow, Knudsen diffusion and surface diffusion of adsorbed gas, and real gas effect and confinement effect, and at the same time considering the effects of matrix shrinkage, stress sensitivity, adsorption layer thinning, confinement effect and real gas effect on pore radius. The effects of adsorption layer thinning, stress sensitivity, matrix shrinkage effect, real gas effect and confinement effect on apparent permeability are systematically analyzed

Model Description
Mathematical Model
A2 A3 A4 A5 A6
Knudsen Diffusion
Surface Diffusion of Adsorption Gas
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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