Kang Yang, Yunpei Liang, Wei Li, Qiang Chen, Erlei Su, Chenglin Tian
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
To investigate fully the poroelastic effect on apparent permeability in coal micro/nanopores, a multi-mechanism apparent permeability model coupling the gas slippage effect and the poroelastic effect is hereby constructed on the strength of the lattice Boltzmann method. The contributions of the permeability of gas slippage, surface diffusion, and viscous flow were investigated. The results showed that the gas transport was controlled by surface diffusion in micro/nanopores with initial sizes of less than 10 nm. Under a low pore pressure, the contribution share of gas slippage permeability to the apparent gas permeability decreased exponentially as the pressure rose. When the pore pressure ascended, the dynamic apparent permeability ratio (i.e., the ratio of the apparent permeability affected by the poroelastic effect to the initial apparent permeability) was subjected to the slippage effect initially and dominated by the poroelastic effect later. Additionally, the slippage effect’s contribution to the apparent permeability ratio plunged under a lower pore pressure, but such decrease slackened as the pore pressure grew to a higher value. During coalbed methane (CBM) recovery in low-permeability coal seams, the slippage effect’s contribution to the CBM recovery production surges first, then falls slowly, and finally restores to a slow increase, and its contribution is enhanced in micro/nanopores with smaller average pore sizes.
期刊介绍:
This journal publishes quantitative studies of natural (mainly but not limited to mineral) resources exploration, evaluation and exploitation, including environmental and risk-related aspects. Typical articles use geoscientific data or analyses to assess, test, or compare resource-related aspects. NRR covers a wide variety of resources including minerals, coal, hydrocarbon, geothermal, water, and vegetation. Case studies are welcome.