LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Effect of microscale compressibility on apparent porosity and permeability in shale gas reservoirs

Photo from wikipedia

Abstract The pore network in shale reservoirs comprise of nanoporous organic matter (OM) and micron-size pores in inorganic material (iOM). Accurate gas transport models in shale must include gas slippage,… Click to show full abstract

Abstract The pore network in shale reservoirs comprise of nanoporous organic matter (OM) and micron-size pores in inorganic material (iOM). Accurate gas transport models in shale must include gas slippage, Knudsen diffusion, surface diffusion, and sorption. The change in pore size due to the applied stress could consequently affect gas transport processes. In this study we a compression coefficient to characterize the influence of stress sensitivity on key parameters for gas transport. We consider separate stress response in nanoporous organic matter and iOM because of their different mechanical properties. The effects of compressibility on apparent permeability of OM and iOM are analyzed at different pore sizes, pore pressures and for different gas compositions. Our results show that compressibility has a greater influence on the apparent permeability of iOM than on OM when pore sizes are smaller than 10 nm, whereas compression has similar impact on apparent permeability of both media when pore sizes are larger than 10 nm. With the same effective stress, lower pore pressure results in greater impair in permeability. We conducted a reservoir simulation study using conventional dual-continua model with our developed pressure dependent porosity and permeability to showcase field implication of this study. This work is an important and timely investigation of the development of shale-reservoir-flow simulators.

Keywords: compressibility apparent; porosity permeability; gas; permeability; pore

Journal Title: International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
Year Published: 2018

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.