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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

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Chapter from:
AAPG Memoir 71 : Reservoir Characterization-Recent Advances
Edited by Richard A. Schatzinger and John F. Jordan
Copyright 1999 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.
Memoir 71, Chapter 12: A Direct Method for Previous HitDeterminingNext Hit Complete Positive and Negative Capillary Pressure Curves for Reservoir Rock Using the Centrifuge , by E. A. Spinler and B. A. Baldwin , Pages 175 - 178

Chapter 12

A Direct Method for Previous HitDeterminingNext Hit Complete Positive and Negative Capillary Pressure Curves for Reservoir Rock Using the Centrifuge

E. A. Spinler
B. A. Baldwin
Phillips Petroleum Company
Bartlesville, Oklahoma, U.S.A.


ABSTRACT

A method is developed for direct experimental determination of capillary pressure curves from Previous HitsaturationNext Hit distributions produced while centrifuging fluids in a rock plug. A free-Previous HitwaterNext Hit level is positioned along the length of the plugs to enable simultaneous determination of both positive and negative capillary pressures. Octadecane, as the oil phase, is solidified by temperature reduction while centrifuging to prevent fluid redistribution upon removal from the centrifuge. The Previous HitwaterNext Hit Previous HitsaturationNext Hit is then measured via magnetic resonance imaging. The Previous HitsaturationNext Hit profile within the plug and the calculation of pressures for each point of the Previous HitsaturationNext Hit profile allow for a complete capillary pressure curve to be determined from one experiment. Centrifuging under oil with a free-Previous HitwaterNext Hit level into a 100% Previous HitwaterNext Hit saturated plug results in the development of a primary drainage capillary pressure curve. Centrifuging similarly at initial Previous HitwaterNext Hit Previous HitsaturationTop in the plug results in the development of an imbibition capillary pressure curve. Examples of these measurements are presented for Berea sandstone and chalk rocks.

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