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Capillary
Pressure
Curves for Reservoir Rock Using the Centrifuge
Chapter 12
Capillary
Pressure
Curves for Reservoir Rock Using the Centrifuge
E. A. SpinlerB. A. Baldwin
Phillips Petroleum Company
Bartlesville, Oklahoma, U.S.A.
ABSTRACT
capillary
pressure
curves from saturation distributions produced while centrifuging fluids in a rock plug. A
free-water 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 water saturation is then measured via
magnetic resonance imaging. The saturation profile within the plug and the calculation of
pressures for each point of the saturation profile allow for a complete
capillary
pressure
curve to be determined from one experiment. Centrifuging under oil with a free-water level
into a 100% water saturated plug results in the development of a primary drainage
capillary
pressure
curve. Centrifuging similarly at initial water saturation 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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