Phase-Field Simulation of Imbibition for the Matrix-Fracture of Tight Oil Reservoirs Considering Temperature Change
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Model Geometry and Assumptions
- Oil-water two-phases are incompressible fluid without phase transition;
- Local thermal equilibrium assumption between fluid and rock;
- The seepage process is two-dimensional horizontal flow, ignoring the influence of gravity;
- Changes in fracture width caused by mechanical factors are not considered.
2.2. Governing Equations
3. Analysis of Imbibition Mechanism of Tight Reservoirs
3.1. Phase-Field Method Verification
3.2. Thermal Simulation Verification
3.3. Analysis of Tight Oil Matrix-Fracture Imbibition Mechanism
3.4. Micro-Seepage Process of Tight Oil Matrix-Fracture
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Single-Factor Analysis
4.1.1. Wetting Angle
4.1.2. Oil-Water Interfacial Tension
4.1.3. Oil-Water Viscosity Ratio
4.2. Simulation Results and Analysis of the Actual Example
5. Conclusions
- The oil-water imbibition phenomena in the matrix-fracture system mainly include the reverse imbibition in the matrix and the forward imbibition in the micro-fracture. The capillary force is the main driving force. At the micro-nano scale, the influence of gravity and the imbibition process can be ignored. The seepage of the actual pore throat model is weaker than the ideal pore throat model.
- The oil-water imbibition process of matrix-fracture at the microscale can be expressed as the fracture is first filled with water. Under the action of capillary force, the water phase enters the matrix from small pores. Due to the different pore throat sizes, the pressure difference is formed. Under pressure difference, the oil phase is displaced to the large pores and enters the fracture to form small oil droplets. The small oil droplets gradually gather into large oil droplets, and positive imbibition occurs in the fracture. The oil phase flows along the fracture with the water phase to complete the matrix-fracture oil-water imbibition replacement.
- Wettability, oil-water interfacial tension, oil-water viscosity ratio, and inhomogeneous distribution of rock particles affect the matrix-fracture imbibition process. Reducing oil-water contact angle and oil-water viscosity ratio and increasing oil-water interfacial tension is beneficial to the imbibition process.
- The heat conduction process is the primary heat transfer mechanism at the microscale. When the injection temperature is different from the formation temperature, it will soon spread to the imbibition area. Therefore, the influence of temperature change in the imbibition process cannot be ignored. Under the conditions given in this paper, the increase in injection temperature is conducive to imbibition.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Model Parameters | Model I | Model II | |
---|---|---|---|
Values | Values | Units | |
Model size (length × width) | 208.0 × 123.5 | 34.51 × 50.35 | |
Water and oil viscosity | 5/3/1, 1 | mPa·s | |
Rock, water, and oil density | 2700, 1000, 850 | 2700, 1000, 850 | kg/m3 |
Specific heat of rock, water, and oil | 800, 4200, 2200 | 800, 4200, 2200 | J/(kg·K) |
Average thermal conductivity of rock, water, and oil | 4.5, 0.6, 0.16 | 4.5, 0.6, 0.16 | W/(m·K) |
Initial formation temperature | 100 | 100 | ℃ |
Injection fluid temperature | 20 | 60/120/180 | ℃ |
Contact angle | 22.5/30/45/60/90 | °C | |
Oil-water interfacial tension | 50/25/5 | mN/m | |
Permeability of single-phase water | 0.22 | 0.426 | mD |
Inlet velocity in fracture | 1000 | 1000 |
Model Parameters | Values | Units |
---|---|---|
Model size (x × y × z) | 10 × 10 × 10 | m |
Density of rock and fluid | 2700, 1000 | kg/m3 |
Fracture aperture | 0.02 | m |
Fluid viscosity | 1 | mPa·s |
Thermal conductivity of rock and fluid | 5, 0.6 | W/(m·K) |
Specific heat of rock and fluid | 1000, 4200 | J/(kg·K) |
Initial reservoir temperature | 100 | ℃ |
Injection fluid temperature | 20 | ℃ |
Injection fluid rate | 0.01 | m3/s |
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Shi, J.; Cheng, L.; Cao, R.; Jia, Z.; Liu, G. Phase-Field Simulation of Imbibition for the Matrix-Fracture of Tight Oil Reservoirs Considering Temperature Change. Water 2021, 13, 1004. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13071004
Shi J, Cheng L, Cao R, Jia Z, Liu G. Phase-Field Simulation of Imbibition for the Matrix-Fracture of Tight Oil Reservoirs Considering Temperature Change. Water. 2021; 13(7):1004. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13071004
Chicago/Turabian StyleShi, Junjie, Linsong Cheng, Renyi Cao, Zhihao Jia, and Gaoling Liu. 2021. "Phase-Field Simulation of Imbibition for the Matrix-Fracture of Tight Oil Reservoirs Considering Temperature Change" Water 13, no. 7: 1004. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13071004
APA StyleShi, J., Cheng, L., Cao, R., Jia, Z., & Liu, G. (2021). Phase-Field Simulation of Imbibition for the Matrix-Fracture of Tight Oil Reservoirs Considering Temperature Change. Water, 13(7), 1004. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13071004