Abstract

Gravity and capillary forces play pivotal roles in the natural capillary-driven spontaneous imbibition process. The opacity of the medium and the intricate pore structure make it challenging to elucidate the influence of gravity force on co-current gas–water imbibition. A series of pore-scale visualization experiments were conducted using capillary tubes of five different diameters (100, 300, 400, 500, and 1000 μm). The vector concept, represented by the interaction angle with the horizontal direction, was employed to quantify the varying levels of gravity force in the imbibition process, and its impact on imbibition recovery was assessed quantitatively. The findings revealed that the primary influence of gravity on gas–water spontaneous imbibition recovery was predominantly observed in the early stage. Due to the water blocking effect, the gas–water spontaneous imbibition process temporarily halted and resumed when the capillary diameter was 300 μm (at an angle of 60°). For capillary diameters between 100 and 500 μm, the water blocking effect induced a wave-like variation in gas–water spontaneous imbibition recovery as the interaction angle increased. Conversely, for a capillary diameter of 1000 μm, imbibition recovery exponentially decreased with the interaction angle, and no water blocking effect was observed. Consequently, the critical range of pore sizes for the water blocking effect in the gas–water spontaneous imbibition process was determined to be between 500 and 1000 μm. This research offers valuable theoretical insights into understanding capillary-driven flow phenomena in porous media.

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