Effect of surfactants on wettability of near-wellbore regions of gas reservoirs
โ Scribed by B. Adibhatla; K.K. Mohanty; P. Berger; C. Lee
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 566 KB
- Volume
- 52
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0920-4105
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โฆ Synopsis
The flow of gas in tight, low-pressure gas wells can be partially blocked by the water saturation build-up near the hydraulic fracture face if the drawdown pressure does not exceed the capillary pressure. To increase the productivity, the water saturation may be reduced by alteration of the near-wellbore wettability from water-wet conditions to intermediate-wet conditions. Many surfactants have been identified which change the wettability of carbonate and sandstone rocks from water-wet to intermediate-wet in water-air-rock systems. Among fluorosilanes, as the number of fluoro groups increases, rocks become less water-wet. One day of aging period and 1 wt.% concentration appear to be sufficient for altering wettability. Interaction with field brine plays a crucial role in selection of appropriate surfactants. The increase in gas relative permeability due to the change in wettability is a function of the pressure gradient.
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