Abstract

A look into the literature on the temperature dependency of oil and water relative permeabilities reveals contradictory reports. There are some publications reporting shifts in the water saturation range as well as variations in the relative permeability curves by temperature. On the other hand, some authors have blamed the experimental artifacts, viscous instabilities and fingering issues for these variations. We have performed core flooding experiments to further investigate this issue. Glass bead packs and sand packs were used as the porous media, and Athabasca bitumen with varying viscosities was displaced by hot water at differing temperatures. The unsteady-state method of relative permeability measurement was applied and the experimental data were history matched by a simulator that is tailor made to predict the relative permeabilities. The matches were obtained by varying the relative permeability correlation parameters. The results indicated that the initial water saturation has a direct relation with temperature, while residual oil saturation generally drops at higher temperatures. Although the water saturation range shifts, no direct and unique trend for either oil or water relative permeability is justified. The spread in relative permeabilities especially in the case of higher permeable cores suggests that viscous instabilities are present. As the same saturation shift happens by only changing the oil viscosity, the relative permeability variations with temperature can be attributed to oil to water viscosity ratio changes with temperature. Temperature dependency of relative permeabilities is more related to experimental artifacts, viscous fingering and viscosity changes than fundamental flow properties.

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