WETTABILITY EFFECTS ON OIL-RECOVERY MECHANISMS IN FRACTURED RESERVOIRS

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dc.contributor.author Graue A.
dc.contributor.author Bognø T.
dc.contributor.author Baldwin B.A.
dc.contributor.author Spinier E.A.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-02-13T08:02:35Z
dc.date.available 2021-02-13T08:02:35Z
dc.date.issued 2001
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=32158544
dc.identifier.citation SPE Reservoir Evaluation and Engineering, 2001, 4, 6, 455-465
dc.identifier.issn 1094-6470
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/24877
dc.description.abstract Iterative comparison between experimental work and numerical simulations has been used to predict oil-recovery mechanisms in fractured chalk as a function of wettability. Selective and reproducible alteration of wettability by aging in crude oil at an elevated temperature produced chalk blocks that were strongly water-wet and moderately water-wet, but with identical mineralogy and pore geometry. Large scale, nuclear-tracer, 2D-imaging experiments monitored the waterflooding of these blocks of chalk, first whole, then fractured. This data provided in-situ fluid saturations for validating numerical simulations and evaluating capillary pressure-and relative permeability-input data used in the simulations. Capillary pressure and relative permeabilities at each wettability condition were measured experimentally and used as input for the simulations. Optimization of either Pc-data or kr-curves gave indications of the validity of these input data. History matching both the production profile and the in-situ saturation distribution development gave higher confidence in the simulations than matching production profiles only.
dc.title WETTABILITY EFFECTS ON OIL-RECOVERY MECHANISMS IN FRACTURED RESERVOIRS
dc.type Статья


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