2017
DOI: 10.1002/2017wr020810
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Steady‐state supercritical CO2 and brine relative permeability in Berea sandstone at different temperature and pressure conditions

Abstract: We measure steady‐state two‐phase supercritical CO2‐brine relative permeabilities in a 61 cm‐long Berea sandstone core at three different conditions (40°C and 12.41 MPa, 40°C and 8.27 MPa, and 60°C and 12.41 MPa) under primary drainage. We use pressure taps to obtain pressure drops of individual sections of the core, and X‐ray Computed Tomography (CT) to obtain in situ saturation profiles, which together help to mitigate the capillary end effect. We include previously measured relative permeabilities at 20°C a… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…From the top to bottom (flow direction), oil saturation in fracture increased from 7% to 67% for Exp A and from 5% to 36% for Exp B. Increase of wetting phase saturation with flow direction was also observed in previous experiments due to capillary continuity toward the outlet. In comparison, fracture oil saturation after gas C injection in Exp C was 3% without vertical variations. The reason for lower S org in fracture and less vertical variations for Exp C is due to gas C having the lowest IFT and capillary pressure.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 65%
“…From the top to bottom (flow direction), oil saturation in fracture increased from 7% to 67% for Exp A and from 5% to 36% for Exp B. Increase of wetting phase saturation with flow direction was also observed in previous experiments due to capillary continuity toward the outlet. In comparison, fracture oil saturation after gas C injection in Exp C was 3% without vertical variations. The reason for lower S org in fracture and less vertical variations for Exp C is due to gas C having the lowest IFT and capillary pressure.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 65%
“…Concurrent improvements of X‐ray microtomography combined with its nondestructive features have allowed direct visualization of pore‐scale structures and distribution of phases as inputs to computational models. A number of authors have investigated pore‐scale phases distribution using X‐ray microtomography and demonstrated the complexity of the nonwetting and wetting phase interface geometry (e.g., Armstrong et al, ; Blunt et al, ; X. Chen & DiCarlo, ; X. Chen et al, ; Gao et al, ; Garing et al, ; Moghadasi et al, ; Prodanovic et al, , ; Reynolds et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Changes in the overburden or pore pressure can alter pore structure and fluid distribution, impacting relative permeability [23][24][25][26]. Temperature affects fluid viscosity and interfacial tension, thus influencing fluid flow and relative permeability in the reservoir [27][28][29][30][31][32].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%