Ximena Melgarejo-Castellanos, Manuel Coronado, Héctor Erick Gallardo-Ferrera, Martín Alberto Díaz-Viera
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Fines detachment, migration and pore clogging are important processes in diverse problems in underground formations. Recent works have analyzed the idea of employing fines detached by low-salinity water injection to modify water trajectories in a rock formation. In oil and geothermal reservoirs, fines can play, in this context, a beneficial role in water production control. In underground pollution processes, fines can serve as a potential mechanism for isolating soil or water contaminants. In this work, a new application to block the fluid flow in a conducting fault that directly links the injection well with extraction wells by using a slug of low-salinity water is explored. This technique could bear significant relevance, particularly in scenarios where water is injected to displace oil or soil contaminants from the formation into extraction wells. The existence of this type of highly conductive pathways can significantly reduce the efficiency of oil or contaminant sweeping. To analyze the problem, we consider here a low-salinity water slug that is introduced in the injection stream of a standard inverse five-spot well array, in which a high-permeability fault-like streak directly connects the injector with two of the four extraction wells. The mathematical model to describe fines detachment, migration, pore clogging and permeability impairment is revisited and adapted. The nonlinear coupled equation set for single-phase fluid flow, salinity transport and fines dynamics is numerically solved by a finite element method. The efficiency of the low-salinity fines detaching method to block water flow in conductive faults is discussed in terms of slug injection period, slug salinity and flow injection rate. The most sensitive parameters are injection period and injection rate. It was found that fines are equally effective at obstructing broad or narrow faults.
期刊介绍:
-Publishes original research on physical, chemical, and biological aspects of transport in porous media-
Papers on porous media research may originate in various areas of physics, chemistry, biology, natural or materials science, and engineering (chemical, civil, agricultural, petroleum, environmental, electrical, and mechanical engineering)-
Emphasizes theory, (numerical) modelling, laboratory work, and non-routine applications-
Publishes work of a fundamental nature, of interest to a wide readership, that provides novel insight into porous media processes-
Expanded in 2007 from 12 to 15 issues per year.
Transport in Porous Media publishes original research on physical and chemical aspects of transport phenomena in rigid and deformable porous media. These phenomena, occurring in single and multiphase flow in porous domains, can be governed by extensive quantities such as mass of a fluid phase, mass of component of a phase, momentum, or energy. Moreover, porous medium deformations can be induced by the transport phenomena, by chemical and electro-chemical activities such as swelling, or by external loading through forces and displacements. These porous media phenomena may be studied by researchers from various areas of physics, chemistry, biology, natural or materials science, and engineering (chemical, civil, agricultural, petroleum, environmental, electrical, and mechanical engineering).