Abstract

Experimental results have shown that resistivity index can deviate from Archie's law at low conductive phase saturation. Previous works have claimed that wettability and flow history are the two main factors causing this phenomenon. Herein, we investigate how the underlying fluid morphology influences electrical resistivity. We start from digital synchrotron x-ray microcomputed tomography images at different conductive phase saturations. We then simulate two-phase flow at different Capillary numbers and wettabilities to investigate deviations in resistivity index. We discover that other than water saturation the connectivity of water quantified by Euler characteristic is an important parameter in determining electrical resistivity for intermediate to purely oil-wet conditions. Deviations in electrical resistivity are found to start at low Capillary number ($\mathrm{Ca}\ensuremath{\sim}{10}^{\ensuremath{-}5}$) for intermediate and oil-wet conditions for the full range of water saturations. We study correlations between resistivity index, saturation, and Euler characteristic by using the Pearson product-moment correlation and a linear regression model. We find a strong correlation between water saturation and resistivity index for the water-wet case while for the intermediate and oil-wet cases a strong correlation between Euler characteristic and resistivity index was observed. The results are explained in terms of percolation theory and a general relationship for resistivity index is proposed for intermediate-wet to oil-wet systems whereby the percolation parameter is normalized Euler characteristic. The findings explain previously observed deviations in resistivity index measurements and allow for a means to predict Euler characteristic from laboratory core-scale experiments using the proposed percolation model.

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