4.7 Article

Connecting Pressure-Saturation and Relative Permeability Models to Fracture Properties: The Case of Capillary-Dominated Flow of Supercritical CO2 and Brine

Journal

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 54, Issue 9, Pages 6965-6982

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2018WR023526

Keywords

two-phase flow; fracture; heterogeneous; roughness; correlation length; CO2

Funding

  1. Center for Frontiers of Subsurface Energy Security (CFSES) at the University of Texas at Austin, an Energy Frontier Research Center - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0001114]
  2. Geology Foundation of the University of Texas

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Fractures are potential pathways for subsurface fluids. In the context of geologic CO2 sequestration, fractures could threaten the security of reservoirs since they are pathways for leakage. However, the constitutive equations describing the pressure-saturation and relative permeability-saturation, key inputs for flow modeling and prediction, are poorly understood for two-phase fracture flow at the field scale where each fracture might be an element of a complex fracture network or dual-porosity domain. This knowledge is required for the safe storage of CO2 under potentially fractured caprocks. To address this, we numerically simulated two-phase viscous flow through horizontal heterogeneous fractures across a broad range of roughness and aperture correlation length. The numerical experiments, which solved the modified local cubic law, showed a weak to strong phase interference during the drainage process; that is, supercritical CO2 displaces brine if the imposed pressure+local viscous force > local capillary force. The drainage process ended when no new brine cells can be further invaded by CO2. Afterward, we froze the saturation field for each individual phase and calculated the relative permeability by single-phase flow modeling. Thousands of simulated pressure-saturation and relative permeability curves enabled us to estimate and connect the parameters of the Van-Genuchten model and of the generalized nu-type model to fracture roughness and aperture correlation length. This empirical connection will be useful for assessing and predicting immiscible two-phase flow in horizontal rough fractures at the large scale. Plain Language Summary The analysis and modeling of two-phase flow require equations relating pressure and relative permeability with saturation. While these equations are somewhat mature for porous media flow applications, application of them in fractures or fractured media remains an open challenge. The key challenge is because of fracture heterogeneity represented by the roughness of the fracture surfaces and spatial structure of the aperture or spacing between fracture surfaces. We addressed this challenge by simulating two-phase flow of supercritical CO2 and brine through 7,700 heterogeneous fractures across a broad range of roughness and aperture correlation length. Using all these simulations, we systematically and successfully estimated the parameters in the Van-Genuchten model for pressure-saturation and the generalized nu-type model for relative permeability-saturation. The model parameters were then related to fracture roughness and aperture correlation length. This partly solves the challenge of predicting two-phase flow at the large scale.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available