Permeability Flashcards
1
Q
k is a constant under 3 conditions (Darcy’s Law)
A
- laminar flow
- no rock-fluid reaction
- a single flowing fluid
2
Q
How does capillarity affect relative permeability experiments?
A
- Flow rate should not exceed limit set by capillary number to achieve a more piston-like displacement
- Ultimate saturation that can be achieved is influenced by capillary pressure
3
Q
How is relative permeability measured?
A
- Steady state technique (preferred)
- Unsteady state technique (viscous fingering at high mobility ratios)
- Centrifuge technique (gravity stable unsteady state technique)
4
Q
Why is relative permeability important?
A
Used to generate production curve
5
Q
How is air permeability measured?
A
- Ruska permeameter (routine)
- Mini permeameter (more detailed profile)
- Pressure pulse permeameter (for low k)
6
Q
When is Klinkenberg effect the greatest?
A
- low pressure
- low k
- low fluid density
7
Q
What corrections need to be applied for core permeability measurements?
A
- Klinkenberg
- Brine permeability (clay effects)
- Stress
8
Q
What are the 3 methods of permeability averaging?
A
- Arithmetic (flow parallel to layers; highest k dominates)
- Harmonic (flow perpendicular to layers; lowest k dominates)
- Geometric (random flow; chooses path of least resistance)
9
Q
What are the methods of estimating horizontal permeability from poro-perm?
A
- Arithmetic shift using rms (analytical)
- Binning method (linear average of k per bin)
- Swanson’s method
10
Q
Why log kh and well test kh do not match?
A
- fractures
- core data under samples high k
- regression is geometric average
- upscaling
- log-based Rock Type model is not robust
- uncertain h of well test
- completion issues: skin of test