Abstract

During micro-scale tracer flow in porous media, the permeability and fluid velocity significantly affect the fluid dispersion properties of the media. However, the relationships between the dispersion coefficient, permeability, and fluid velocity in core samples are still not clearly understood. Two sets of experiments were designed to study the effects of tracer fluid flow velocity and porous medium permeability on the dispersion phenomenon in a core environment, using natural and sand-filled cores, respectively. From experimental data-fitting by a mathematical model, the relationship between the dispersion coefficient, flow velocity, and permeability was identified, allowing the analysis of the underlying mechanism behind this phenomenon. The results show that a higher volumetric flow rate and lower permeability cause a delay in the tracer breakthrough time and an increase in the dispersion coefficient. The core experimental results show that the dispersion coefficient is negatively correlated with the permeability and positively correlated with the superficial velocity. The corresponding regression equations indicate linear relations between the dispersion coefficient, core permeability, and fluid velocity, resulting from the micron scale of grain diameters in cores. The combination of high velocity and low permeability yields a large dispersion coefficient. The effects of latitudinal dispersion in porous media cannot be ignored in low-permeability cores or formations. These findings can help to improve the understanding of tracer flow in porous media, the design of injection parameters, and the interpretation of tracer concentration distribution in inter-well tracer tests.

Highlights

  • The results showed that the calculated dispersion coefficient was positively correlated with the core permeability on a semi-logarithmic scale

  • Based on the results obtained from the displacement experiments, the core dispersion coefficient was obtained by fitting the breakthrough concentration using the analytical solution Equation (A12) [3]

  • The relations between the dispersion coefficient, velocity, and permeability were obtained through fitting the experimental results with an analytical model

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Summary

Introduction

The inter-well tracer test is one of the most mature and advanced testing techniques in reservoir development at present [1]. Formation heterogeneity properties, such as waterflooding channel permeability and fracture network volume, can be obtained from tracer concentration interpretation [2]. Conservative tracers do not interact or alter during the transport, their concentration is not affected by processes other than dilution, dispersion, and partial redirection. It is necessary to study the dispersion effect on tracer flow to improve formation heterogeneity characterization by inter-well tracer tests [4]

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