Abstract

Summary An oil/water capillary transition zone often contains a sizable portion of a field's initial oil in place, especially for those carbonate reservoirs with low matrix permeability. The field-development plan and ultimate recovery may be influenced heavily by how much oil can be recovered from the transition zone. This in turn depends on a number of geological and petrophysical properties that influence the distribution of initial oil saturation (Sor) against depth, and on the rock and fluid interactions that control the residual oil saturation (Sor), capillary pressure, and relative permeability characteristics as a function of initial oil saturation. Because of the general lack of relevant experimental data and the insufficient physical understanding of the characteristics of the transition zone, modeling both the static and dynamic properties of carbonate fields with large transition zones remains an ongoing challenge. In this paper, we first review the transition-zone definition and the current limitations in modeling transition zones. We describe the methodology recently developed, based on extensive experimental measurements and numerical simulation, for modeling both static and dynamic properties in capillary transition zones. We then address how to calculate initial-oil-saturation distribution in the carbonate fields by reconciling log and core data and taking into account the effect of reservoir wettability and its impact on petrophysical interpretations. The effects of relative permeability and imbibition capillary pressure curves on oil recovery in heterogeneous reservoirs with large transition zones are assessed. It is shown that a proper description of relative permeability and capillary pressure curves including hysteresis, based on experimental special-core-analysis (SCAL) data, has a significant impact on the field-performance predictions, especially for heterogeneous reservoirs with transition zones.

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