Spontaneous removal behavior of water phase trapping damage in tight sandstone gas reservoirs

被引:0
|
作者
机构
[1] You, Li-Jun
[2] 2,Shi, Yu-Jiang
[3] 2,Zhang, Hai-Tao
[4] Kang, Yi-Li
[5] Ren, Yuan
来源
You, L.-J. (youlj0379@126.com) | 1600年 / Science Press, 16 Donghuangchenggen North Street, Beijing, 100717, China卷 / 24期
关键词
Petroleum reservoirs - Tight gas - Damage detection - Flow of gases - Gases;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Water phase trapping of tight gas reservoir caused by its high capillary pressure prevents gas reservoirs from being detected, precisely evaluated and economically developed. The present physical and chemical methods for removal of water phase trapping is seldom applied because that they might cause other damages. The experiments of N2 displacement to stimulate formation water tight sandstone core samples with the permeability of less than 0.1×10-3μm2, (0.1-0.3)×10-3μm2, and more than 0.3×10-3μm2 are conducted under the conditions of in situ stress and constant flow pressure difference or increased pressure differences to recognize the water flowback behavior in tight sandstone. The results indict that water saturation of core samples decreases gradually, and the lower the permeability of cores is, the lower the decrease rate of water saturation will be, and that the decrease rate of water saturation of core with the permeability of (0.1-0.3)×10-3μm2 displaced by increasing pressure difference is lower than that displaced by constant pressure difference within 150 hours, but the water flowback rate of core displaced by increasing pressure difference is higher. The analysis of results show that water phase trapping is severe. Pore throat structure, permeability and pressure gradient are the most important factors. The process of water flowback from cores includes two effects, water displaced by gas and water evaporation due to gas flow. If the pressure difference of water flowback increases properly, it will accelerate water evaporation effect when gas can flow through different sizes of pore throats.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Threshold Pore Pressure Gradients in Water-Bearing Tight Sandstone Gas Reservoirs
    Wang, Yong
    Long, Yunqian
    Sun, Yeheng
    Zhang, Shiming
    Song, Fuquan
    Wang, Xiaohong
    ENERGIES, 2019, 12 (23)
  • [42] Predicting aqueous phase trapping damage in tight reservoirs using quantum neural networks
    Sun, Yuxue
    Zhao, Jingyuan
    Bai, Mingxing
    ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES, 2015, 73 (10) : 5815 - 5823
  • [43] Water Blocking Damage Evaluation and Mitigation Method in Tight Gas Reservoirs
    Wang, Chengwei
    Su, Yuliang
    Wang, Wendong
    Li, Lei
    Zhang, Lipeng
    Wang, Tianxiang
    Energy and Fuels, 2022, 36 (18): : 10934 - 10944
  • [44] Predicting aqueous phase trapping damage in tight reservoirs using quantum neural networks
    Yuxue Sun
    Jingyuan Zhao
    Mingxing Bai
    Environmental Earth Sciences, 2015, 73 : 5815 - 5823
  • [45] Mineral composition and pore structure on spontaneous imbibition in tight sandstone reservoirs
    Chen Yang
    Erlong Yang
    Scientific Reports, 15 (1)
  • [46] Tight gas sandstone reservoirs in China: characteristics and recognition criteria
    Zou, Caineng
    Zhu, Rukai
    Liu, Keyu
    Su, Ling
    Bai, Bin
    Zhang, Xiangxiang
    Yuan, Xuejian
    Wang, Jinhong
    JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2012, 88-89 : 82 - 91
  • [47] Effects of microstructural and petrophysical properties on spontaneous imbibition in tight sandstone reservoirs
    Xia, Yuxuan
    Tian, Zhenhua
    Xu, Sai
    Wei, Wei
    Cai, Jianchao
    JOURNAL OF NATURAL GAS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2021, 96
  • [48] Study on the rock physics model of gas reservoirs in tight sandstone
    Wang Da-Xing
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICS-CHINESE EDITION, 2016, 59 (12): : 4603 - 4622
  • [50] Application of wavelet analysis in identification of tight sandstone gas reservoirs
    Shi Y.
    Pan B.
    Jiang B.
    Zhang H.
    Yang X.
    Guo Y.
    Liu D.
    Jiang, Bici (jiangbici@cctegxian.com), 1600, China University of Geosciences (41): : 2127 - 2135