Abstract

In order to explore the impact of various flood schemes and pore throat heterogeneity on oil recovery efficiency in porous media, core-flood experiments and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) tests are conducted to quantitatively determine the initial oil distribution and the residual oil distribution in medium-to-high-permeability cores subjected to these various flood schemes. Multiple experimental runs are conducted with four field core samples to cover the various flood schemes: the secondary water flood, CO2-foam flood, and water-alternating-CO2 flood (WAG). Experimental results show that, relatively speaking, at the initial oil saturation condition, the moderate pore throats contain the highest amount of oil. The water flood recovery degree is higher from larger pore throats (average recovery degree of 98.57%) than that from moderate pore throats (average recovery degree of 78.29%). The water flood efficiency in different cores is found to be dependent on the degree of heterogeneity in pore throat dis...

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