Quantitative evaluation of water-alternative-natural gas flooding in enhancing oil recovery of fractured tight cores by NMR

被引:0
作者
Baishuo Liu
Chuanjin Yao
Yaqian Liu
Jia Zhao
Zhengdong Lei
Yiran Zhou
Yuyuan Song
Lei Li
机构
[1] China University of Petroleum (East China),Key Laboratory of Unconventional Oil and Gas Development, Ministry of Education
[2] China University of Petroleum (East China),School of Petroleum Engineering
[3] Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration and Development,undefined
[4] PetroChina,undefined
来源
Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology | 2024年 / 14卷
关键词
NMR; Water-alternating-natural gas flooding; Tight reservoir; Gas channeling; Pore space;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
As the associated gas of tight reservoirs, natural gas is abundant and noncorrosive, which is more suitable for the development of tight oil reservoirs in China. However, the mechanism of gas injection development is unclear, and the gas channeling is serious in tight reservoirs after fracturing. The water-alternating-gas (WAG) flooding is an effective means to delay gas channeling and improve oil recovery. Therefore, it is significant to clarify the mechanism of preventing gas channeling and recovering oil by water-alternation-natural gas (WANG) flooding. The WANG flooding experiments with different water–gas slugs were conducted in non-fracture and fractured tight cores. Besides, the oil distribution of different pore spaces of cores before and after displacement and the main contribution spaces on oil recovery were quantitatively analyzed by using nuclear magnetic resonance and core mercury porosimetry techniques. The results indicate that compared with natural gas flooding, the WANG flooding can retard gas channeling, increase formation energy, and enhance oil recovery by up to 14.1%, especially in fractured cores. Under the resistance of water slugs, the gas was allowed to enter smaller pores and its swept volume was expanded. Oil is mainly stored in mesopores (0.1–1 μm) and small pores (0.01–0.1 μm), accounting for over 90% of the total volume. The oil recovered mainly comes from mesopores, which accounts for over 75% of the total amount. Moreover, the WANG flooding strengthens the recovery of oil in mesopores and macropores (1–10 μm), but it also squeezes oil into small pores and micropores (0.001–0.01 μm).
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 237
页数:16
相关论文
共 134 条
[1]  
Al-Bayati D(2018)Insight investigation of miscible SCCO J CO2 Util 28 255-263
[2]  
Saeedi A(2001) Water Alternating Gas (WAG) injection performance in heterogeneous sandstone reservoirs SPE Reserv Eval Eng 4 97-106
[3]  
Myers M(2018)Review of WAG field experience Eng Source Part A 40 2528-2541
[4]  
White C(2019)Stimulated-based characterization recovery enhancement feedback of oil-rim reservoirs Eng Explor Exploit 37 945-959
[5]  
Xie Q(2017)An experimental study of alternative hot water alternating gas injection in a fractured model Acta Pet Sin 38 902-915
[6]  
Clennell B(2015)Quantitative characterization of pore structure of tight gas sandstone reservoirs by NMR J Nat Gas Sci Eng 27 1063-1073
[7]  
Christensen JR(2021) spectrum technology: a case study of Carboniferous-Permian tight sandstone reservoir in Linqing depression Energy Fuels 35 16607-16616
[8]  
Stenby EH(2002)Parametric study of oil recovery during CO Vadose Zone J 1 38-57
[9]  
Skauge A(2018) injections in fractured chalk: influence of fracture permeability, diffusion length and water saturation Adv Geo-Energy Res 2 122-134
[10]  
Ebadati A(2021)Quantitative evaluation of shale-oil recovery during CO J Pet Sci Eng 207 109170-612