Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4525552 | Advances in Water Resources | 2014 | 16 Pages |
•Our deterministic algorithm adds microporosity into two-scale, 3D unstructured network models.•Microporosity is added within partially dissolved grains or within pores.•Off-diagonal complexity can distinguish different types of microporosity added.•Relative permeability behavior strongly depends on the microporosity type.•If cementation disconnects larger scale porosity, sometimes neither fluid flows.
Sizeable amounts of connected microporosity with various origins can have a profound effect on important petrophysical properties of a porous medium such as (absolute/relative) permeability and capillary pressure relationships. We construct pore-throat networks that incorporate both intergranular porosity and microporosity. The latter originates from two separate mechanisms: partial dissolution of grains and pore fillings (e.g. clay). We then use the reconstructed network models to estimate the medium flow properties. In this work, we develop unique network construction algorithms and simulate capillary pressure–saturation and relative permeability–saturation curves for cases with inhomogeneous distributions of pores and micropores. Furthermore, we provide a modeling framework for variable amounts of cement and connectivity of the intergranular porosity and quantifying the conditions under which microporosity dominates transport properties. In the extreme case of a disconnected inter-granular network due to cementation a range of saturations within which neither fluid phase is capable of flowing emerges. To our knowledge, this is the first flexible pore scale model, from first principles, to successfully approach this behavior observed in tight reservoirs.