Dynamic in-situ measurement of reservoir wettability
US-2015034307-A1 · Feb 5, 2015 · US
US10113946B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10113946-B2 |
| Application number | US-201615191099-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jun 23, 2016 |
| Priority date | Jun 24, 2015 |
| Publication date | Oct 30, 2018 |
| Grant date | Oct 30, 2018 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A new method of assessing wettability of a reservoir rock is provided, using a mineral oil/alkane saturated sample first, a crude oil and water saturated sample equivalent to natural reservoir rock second, and a third crude oil saturated, water free sample, measuring different wettability states and comparing the slopes of all three adjusted values to determine a wettability state for the reservoir rock.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A method of assessing wettability of a reservoir rock, comprising: a) obtaining a first sample of a reservoir rock from a reservoir and cleaning said first sample; b) saturating said first sample with a mineral oil or alkane and performing a first imbibition experiment; c) plotting a first oil recovery plot against dimensionless time or square root of time; d) obtaining a second sample of said reservoir rock that contains oil and water in a natural state and performing a second imbibition experiment; e) plotting a second oil recovery plot against dimensionless time or square root of time; f) obtaining a third sample of said reservoir rock and cleaning said third sample; g) saturating said third sample with the crude oil of said reservoir and performing a third imbibition experiment; h) plotting a third oil recovery plot against dimensionless time or square root of time; i) adjusting said first, second and third oil recovery plots to a y intercept of zero; and j) estimating the slopes of the adjusted first (m 1 ), second (m 2 ) and third (m 3 ) oil recovery plots; k) calculating a wettability index using: wettability index= m x /( m vsww +m ow ) where m x is the slope of the imbibition curve from the core sample of interest m 1 , m 2 , or m 3 , m vsww is the slope of the imbibition curve of a Very Strongly Water-Wet (VSWW) core sample and m ow is the slope of the imbibition curve of an oil-wet (ow) core sample. 2. The method of claim 1 , wherein said first sample is outcrop rock representative of the said reservoir. 3. The method of claim 1 , wherein said first and third samples are cleaned rock from said reservoir. 4. The method of claim 1 , wherein said reference sample for first and third samples is Berea sandstone or other outcrop sandstone representative of the said reservoir. 5. The method of claim 1 , wherein said reference sample for first and third samples is an outcrop carbonate, limestone, dolomite or chalk representative of the said reservoir. 6. The method of claim 1 , wherein said reference sample for only the first sample is Berea sandstone, other outcrop sandstone, outcrop carbonate, limestone, dolomite or chalk representative of the said reservoir and the third sampled is a cleaned reservoir rock sample. 7. The method of claim 1 , wherein the first and third samples are Berea sandstone outcrop or other outcrop sandstone where the second sample is a sandstone reservoir. 8. The method of claim 1 , wherein the first and third samples are outcrop carbonate, limestone, dolomite, chalk or reservoir rock itself where the second sample is a carbonate type reservoir. 9. The method of claim 1 , wherein the mineral oil or alkane used to saturate the first sample is a low viscosity mineral oil cleaned with activated alumina and silica gel, an n-alkane, a kerosene or an apolar model oil. 10. The method of claim 1 , wherein the crude oil used to saturate the third sample is the crude oil from said reservoir or a crude oil representative of said reservoir. 11. The method of claim 1 , where in the brine used to immerse the core samples in imbibition studies is synthetic reservoir brine or reservoir brine obtained from said reservoir.
Investigating permeability by forcing a fluid through a sample · CPC title
Compositions for enhanced recovery methods for obtaining hydrocarbons, i.e. for improving the mobility of the oil, e.g. displacing fluids · CPC title
by measuring contact angle · CPC title
Investigating surface tension of liquids · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.