Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Nanoconfined Gas Flow Behavior in Organic Shale: Wettability Effect

View through CrossRef
A clear understanding of nanoconfined gas flow behavior in shale gas reservoirs is beneficial for its efficient development. Nanopores in the shale gas reservoirs are characterized by complex surface chemistry and composition, as well as affinity, while their impact on methane flow has not been investigated comprehensively before. In light of current research status, this article proposes a simple yet robust theoretical model, incorporating bulk-gas flow flux and surface diffusion of adsorption gas. In particular, wettability effect, indicating the influences of the shifted critical properties and adsorption thickness, is captured as well. In this article, gas physical attributes, such as gas compressibility factor and gas viscosity, are modified under the nanoconfinement effect and wettability effect, and also the variation of effective pore size, induced by surface wettability, is considered. Notably, wettability effect in this article is described by using a macroscopic form, surface contact angle, facilitating the model applicability. In addition, both the bulk-gas flow model and surface-diffusion model, developed in this research, are able to achieve excellent agreements compared with the existed documents, clarifying the reliability of the proposed model. Meanwhile, key role of wettability effect on nanoconfined gas flow behavior, especially for surface diffusion of adsorption gas, is demonstrated. Results show that (a) the gas flux in small nanopores may exceed that in large nanopores, due to the predominant role of surface diffusion, while pore size is less than 10 nm; (b) the absence of real gas effect will lead to inaccurate characterization of nanoconfined gas flow capacity, and the magnitude can reach 7% for pore size of 5 nm and will enlarge with further pore size shrinkage; (c) wettability effect governs the total gas flux when pore size is less than 10 nm, while its impact will be greatly mitigated when pore size is greater than 50 nm. This article provides a comprehensive investigation to shed light on surface wettability on gas flow behavior through nanopores.
Title: Nanoconfined Gas Flow Behavior in Organic Shale: Wettability Effect
Description:
A clear understanding of nanoconfined gas flow behavior in shale gas reservoirs is beneficial for its efficient development.
Nanopores in the shale gas reservoirs are characterized by complex surface chemistry and composition, as well as affinity, while their impact on methane flow has not been investigated comprehensively before.
In light of current research status, this article proposes a simple yet robust theoretical model, incorporating bulk-gas flow flux and surface diffusion of adsorption gas.
In particular, wettability effect, indicating the influences of the shifted critical properties and adsorption thickness, is captured as well.
In this article, gas physical attributes, such as gas compressibility factor and gas viscosity, are modified under the nanoconfinement effect and wettability effect, and also the variation of effective pore size, induced by surface wettability, is considered.
Notably, wettability effect in this article is described by using a macroscopic form, surface contact angle, facilitating the model applicability.
In addition, both the bulk-gas flow model and surface-diffusion model, developed in this research, are able to achieve excellent agreements compared with the existed documents, clarifying the reliability of the proposed model.
Meanwhile, key role of wettability effect on nanoconfined gas flow behavior, especially for surface diffusion of adsorption gas, is demonstrated.
Results show that (a) the gas flux in small nanopores may exceed that in large nanopores, due to the predominant role of surface diffusion, while pore size is less than 10 nm; (b) the absence of real gas effect will lead to inaccurate characterization of nanoconfined gas flow capacity, and the magnitude can reach 7% for pore size of 5 nm and will enlarge with further pore size shrinkage; (c) wettability effect governs the total gas flux when pore size is less than 10 nm, while its impact will be greatly mitigated when pore size is greater than 50 nm.
This article provides a comprehensive investigation to shed light on surface wettability on gas flow behavior through nanopores.

Related Results

EffectiveFracturing Technology of Normal Pressure Shale Gas Wells
EffectiveFracturing Technology of Normal Pressure Shale Gas Wells
ABSTRACT There is abundant normal pressure shale gas resource in China. However, it is hard to acquire commercial breakthroughs because of the relative low initia...
Microscale Mechanical Anisotropy of Shale
Microscale Mechanical Anisotropy of Shale
ABSTRACT: The hydrocarbon production in the United States, which was dominated by vertical drilling methods, underwent a shift towards combining horizontal and hy...
Scale-dependency Wettability of Tight Sandstone: Insights from an Eocene fluvial sandstone reservoir in the Bohai Bay Basin
Scale-dependency Wettability of Tight Sandstone: Insights from an Eocene fluvial sandstone reservoir in the Bohai Bay Basin
In the development of tight oil reservoirs, wettability determines the distribution and flow behavior of oil and water during reservoir development and enhanced oil recovery. Howev...
Comparisons of Pore Structure for Unconventional Tight Gas, Coalbed Methane and Shale Gas Reservoirs
Comparisons of Pore Structure for Unconventional Tight Gas, Coalbed Methane and Shale Gas Reservoirs
Extended abstract Tight sands gas, coalbed methane and shale gas are three kinds of typical unconventional natural gas. With the decrease of conventional oil and gas...
GEOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND SOME PROBLEMS IN DEVELOPMENT FOR OIL SHALE IN NORTHWEST CHINA ; pp. 380–397
GEOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND SOME PROBLEMS IN DEVELOPMENT FOR OIL SHALE IN NORTHWEST CHINA ; pp. 380–397
With the amount of oil resources becoming increasingly scarce, non-conven­tional resources such as oil shale, oil sands, and heavy oil, have caught our atten­tion. There are abun...
Geochemistry and shale gas potential of the lower Permian marine-continental transitional shales in the Eastern Ordos Basin
Geochemistry and shale gas potential of the lower Permian marine-continental transitional shales in the Eastern Ordos Basin
Marine–continental transitional strata were widely developed in the Ordos Basin in Upper Carboniferous - Lower Permian. The Taiyuan - Shanxi Formation possesses promising shale gas...
Application of Machine Learning to Predict Shale Wettability
Application of Machine Learning to Predict Shale Wettability
Abstract CO2 wettability in shale formations is an important parameter for different applications including, CO2 EOR, CO2 sequestration in saline aquifers where the ...

Back to Top