Abstract

SummaryHigh-pressure core flood experiments using gas condensate fluids in long sandstone cores have been conducted. Steady-state relative permeability points were measured over a wide range of condensate-to-gas ratios (CGR; volume of condensate per unit volume of gas, both at test pressure and temperature), and the velocity and interfacial tension (IFT) were varied between tests to observe the effect on relative permeability. The experimental procedures ensured that the fluid distribution in the cores was representative of gas condensate reservoirs. Hysteresis between drainage and imbibition during the steady-state measurements also was investigated, as was the repeatability of the data.A relative permeability rate effect for both gas and condensate phases was observed, with the relative permeability of both phases increasing with an increase in flow rate. The relative-permeability-rate effect was still evident as the IFT increased by an order of magnitude. The influence of end effects was shown to be negligible under the IFT conditions used in the tests, with the Reynolds number indicating that flow was well within the so-called laminar regime under all test conditions. The observed rate effect was contrary to that of conventional non-Darcy flow, where the effective permeability should decrease with increasing flow rate. A generalized correlation between relative permeability, velocity, and IFT has been proposed.The results highlight the need for appropriate experimental methods and relative permeability relations where the distribution of the phases are representative of those in gas condensate reservoirs.

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