Lithosphere (Jun 2021)
Influence of Pore Throat Structure and the Multiphases Fluid Seepage on Mobility of Tight Oil Reservoir
Abstract
AbstractMobility is the main factor restricting the production of tight oil. In order to explore the influence of pore throat structure and fluid seepage on the mobility, six tight sandstone samples are selected by high-pressure mercury intrusion, nuclear magnetic resonance, water driving oil experiments, and oil-water relative permeability experiments to discuss the influence of pore structure and multiphases on the mobility of tight oil. The results indicate that with the increase in effective porosity, more oil and water are exchanged, and the mobility of the oil phase is enhanced. The large pore is positively correlated with the mobility of tight oil while the relationship between the mobility of small pore and effective porosity remains unclear. Particularly, the mobility of the tight oil is determined by the matching relationship between the pore throat radius and the sorting of the tight reservoir. Specifically, the smaller the two-phase copermeation zone, the greater the bound water saturation; the greater the slope of the oil phase permeability curve, the less the space for the two phases to flow together; the more the oil blocked by water in the reservoir, the worse the phase mobility. The mobility of tight oil can be divided into four categories by pore throat radius, pore throat sorting coefficient, and bound water saturation.