Abstract
Summary The use of WAG (water-altemating-gas) injection can potentially lead to improved oil recovery from the fields. However, there is still an incomplete understanding of the pore-scale physics of the WAG processes and how these lead to improved oil recovery. Simulating the three-phase flow for prediction of the WAG performance in oil reservoirs is an extremely complex process. The existing three-phase relative permeabilities used in simulation are very approximate and do not properly account for the effects of fluid interfacial tension and rock wettability. Network model simulators are being developed to enable the prediction of three-phase relative permeability under different wettability conditions. However, such simulators need to be verified against experimental observations. In this paper, we present experimental results and discussion of a series of capillary-dominated WAG tests carried out in glass micromodels with wettability conditions ranging from water-wet to mixed-wet and oil-wet. Pore level fluid distribution and flow mechanisms were studied, and fluid saturation, at different stages of the experiments, were measured. The results showed that, under any of the wettability conditions, oil recovery by alternating injection of WAG was higher than water or gas injection alone. WAG recovery was observed to be higher for the oil-wet model than that in the mixed-wet one, which in turn was higher than that in the water-wet micromodel. Given enough time and more cycles of WAG injection, the recovery of the mixed-wet model seems to catch up with that of the oil-wet model.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have