Title: Boundary Tension and Wettability
1Boundary Tension and Wettability
2Immiscible Phases
- Earlier discussions have considered only a single
fluid in the pores - porosity
- permeability
- Saturation fraction of pore space occupied by a
particular fluid (immiscible phases) - SwSoSg1
- When more than a single phase is present, the
fluids interact with the rock, and with each other
3DEFINITION OF INTERFACIAL TENSION
- Interfacial (boundary) tension is the energy per
unit area (force per unit distance) at the
surface between phases - Commonly expressed in milli-Newtons/meter (also,
dynes/cm)
4BOUNDARY (INTERFACIAL) TENSION
Modified from PETE 311 Notes
5DEFINITION OF WETTABILITY
- Wettability is the tendency of one fluid to
spread on or adhere to a solid surface in the
presence of other immiscible fluids. - Wettability refers to interaction between fluid
and solid phases.
- Reservoir rocks (sandstone, limestone, dolomite,
etc.) are the solid surfaces - Oil, water, and/or gas are the fluids
6WHY STUDY WETTABILITY?
- Understand physical and chemical interactions
between - Individual fluids and reservoir rocks
- Different fluids with in a reservoir
- Individual fluids and reservoir rocks when
multiple fluids are present - Petroleum reservoirs commonly have 2 3 fluids
(multiphase systems) - When 2 or more fluids are present, there are at
least 3 sets of forces acting on the fluids and
affecting HC recovery
7DEFINITION OF ADHESION TENSION
- Adhesion tension is expressed as the difference
between two solid-fluid interfacial tensions.
- A negative adhesion tension indicates that the
denser phase (water) preferentially wets the
solid surface (and vice versa). - An adhesion tension of 0 indicates that both
phases have equal affinity for the solid surface
8CONTACT ANGLE
The contact angle, q, measured through the denser
liquid phase, defines which fluid wets the solid
surface.
AT adhesion tension, milli-Newtons/m or
dynes/cm) ? contact angle between the
oil/water/solid interface measured through the
water, degrees ?os interfacial energy between
the oil and solid, milli-Newtons/m or dynes/cm
?ws interfacial energy between the water and
solid, milli-Newtons/m or dynes/cm ?ow
interfacial energy (interfacial tension) between
the oil and water, milli-Newtons/m or dynes/cm
9WETTING PHASE FLUID
- Wetting phase fluid preferentially wets the solid
rock surface. - Attractive forces between rock and fluid draw the
wetting phase into small pores. - Wetting phase fluid often has low mobile.
- Attractive forces limit reduction in wetting
phase saturation to an irreducible value
(irreducible wetting phase saturation). - Many hydrocarbon reservoirs are either totally or
partially water-wet.
10NONWETTING PHASE FLUID
- Nonwetting phase does not preferentially wet the
solid rock surface - Repulsive forces between rock and fluid cause
nonwetting phase to occupy largest pores - Nonwetting phase fluid is often the most mobile
fluid, especially at large nonwetting phase
saturations - Natural gas is never the wetting phase in
hydrocarbon reservoirs
11WATER-WET RESERVOIR ROCK
- Reservoir rock is water - wet if water
preferentially wets the rock surfaces - The rock is water- wet under the following
conditions - ?ws gt ?os
- AT lt 0 (i.e., the adhesion tension is negative)
- 0? lt ? lt 90?
- If ? is close to 0?, the rock is considered
- to be strongly water-wet
12WATER-WET ROCK
- Adhesive tension between water and the rock
surface exceeds that between oil and the rock
surface.
13OIL-WET RESERVOIR ROCK
- Reservoir rock is oil-wet if oil preferentially
wets the rock surfaces. - The rock is oil-wet under the following
conditions - ?os gt ?ws
- AT gt 0 (i.e., the adhesion tension is positive)
- 90? lt ? lt 180?
- If ? is close to 180?, the rock is considered to
be strongly oil-wet
14OIL-WET ROCK
- The adhesion tension between water and the rock
surface is less than that between oil and the
rock surface.
15INTERFACIAL CONTACT ANGLES, VARIOUS ORGANIC
LIQUID IN CONTACT WITH SILICA AND CALCITE
From Amyx Bass and Whiting, 1960 modified from
Benner and Bartel, 1941
16- GENERALLY,
- Silicate minerals have acidic surfaces
- Repel acidic fluids such as major polar
- organic compounds present in some crude oils
- Attract basic compounds
- Neutral to oil-wet surfaces
- Carbonate minerals have basic surfaces
- Attract acidic compounds of crude oils
- Neutral to oil-wet surfaces
Tiab and Donaldson, 1996
Caution these are very general statements and
relations that are debated and disputed by
petrophysicists.
17WATER-WET
OIL-WET
18OIL-WET
WATER-WET
19(No Transcript)
20Brown, G.E., 2001, Science, v. 294, p. 67-69
21(No Transcript)
22WETTABILITY IS AFFECTED BY
- Composition of pore-lining minerals
- Composition of the fluids
- Saturation history
23WETTABILITY CLASSIFICATION
- Strongly oil- or water-wetting
- Neutral wettability no preferential
wettability - to either water or oil in the pores
- Fractional wettability reservoir that has
local - areas that are strongly oil-wet, whereas most
- of the reservoir is strongly water-wet
- - Occurs where reservoir rock have variable
- mineral composition and surface
chemistry - Mixed wettability smaller pores area water-wet
- are filled with water, whereas larger pores
are - oil-wet and filled with oil
- - Residual oil saturation is low
- - Occurs where oil with polar organic
compounds - invades a water-wet rock saturated with
brine
24IMBIBITION
- Imbibition is a fluid flow process in which the
saturation of the wetting phase increases and the
nonwetting phase saturation decreases. (e.g.,
waterflood of an oil reservoir that is
water-wet). - Mobility of wetting phase increases as wetting
phase saturation increases - mobility is the fraction of total flow capacity
for a particular phase
25WATER-WET RESERVOIR, IMBIBITION
- Water will occupy the smallest pores
- Water will wet the circumference of most larger
pores - In pores having high oil saturation, oil rests
on a water film - Imbibition - If a water-wet rock saturated with
oil is - placed in water, it will imbibe water into the
smallest - pores, displacing oil
26OIL-WET RESERVOIR, IMBIBITION
- Oil will occupy the smallest pores
- Oil will wet the circumference of most larger
pores - In pores having high water saturation, water
rests on a - water film
- Imbibition - If an oil-wet rock saturated with
water is - placed in oil, it will imbibe oil into the
smallest - pores, displacing water
- e.g., Oil-wet reservoir accumulation of oil in
trap
27DRAINAGE
- Fluid flow process in which the saturation of the
nonwetting phase increases - Mobility of nonwetting fluid phase increases as
nonwetting phase saturation increases - e.g., waterflood of an oil reservoir that is
oil-wet - Gas injection in an oil- or water-wet reservoir
- Pressure maintenance or gas cycling by gas
injection - in a retrograde condensate reservoir
- Water-wet reservoir accumulation of oil or gas
in trap
28IMPLICATIONS OF WETTABILITY
- Primary oil recovery is affected by the
wettability of the system. - A water-wet system will exhibit greater primary
oil recovery.
29WATER-WET
OIL-WET
30IMPLICATIONS OF WETTABILITY
- Oil recovery under waterflooding is affected by
the wettability of the system. - A water-wet system will exhibit greater oil
recovery under waterflooding.
31Water-Wet System
Oil-Wet System
Effect on waterflood of an oil reservoir?
From Levorsen, 1967
32IMPLICATIONS OF WETTABILITY
- Wettability affects the shape of the relative
permeability curves. - Oil moves easier in water-wet rocks than oil-wet
rocks.
33IMPLICATIONS OF WETTABILITY
? p. 274
Modified from Tiab and Donaldson, 1996
34IMPLICATIONS OF WETTABILITY
Water injection, pore volumes
Modified from NExT, 1999
35WETTABILITY AFFECTS
- Capillary Pressure
- Irreducible water saturation
- Residual oil and water saturations
- Relative permeability
- Electrical properties
36LABORATORY MEASUREMENT OF WETTABILITY
- Most common measurement techniques
- Contact angle measurement method
- Amott method
- United States Bureau of Mines (USBM) Method
37NOMENCLATURE
AT adhesion tension, milli-Newtons/m or
dynes/cm) ? contact angle between the
oil/water/solid interface measured through the
water (more dense phase), degrees ?os
interfacial tension between the oil and solid,
milli-Newtons/m or dynes/cm ?ws interfacial
tension between the water and solid,
milli-Newtons/m or dynes/cm ?ow interfacial
tension between the oil and water,
milli-Newtons/m or dynes/cm
38References
- 1. Amyx, J.W., Bass, D.M., and Whiting, R.L.
Petroleum Reservoir Engineering, McGrow-Hill Book
Company New York, 1960. - 2. Tiab, D. and Donaldson, E.C. Petrophysics,
Gulf Publishing Company, Houston, TX. 1996. - 3. Core Laboratories, Inc. A course in the
fundamentals of Core analysis, 1982. - Donaldson, E.C., Thomas, R.D., and Lorenz, P.B.
Wettability Determination and Its Effect - on Recovery Efficiency, SPEJ (March
1969) 13-20.