Claims
- 1. A method for determining the relative amounts of two existing fluid phases in a portion of a subterranean reservoir formation having a known temperature and fluid pressure, wherein one of the phases is mobile and the other is essentially immobile comprising:
- injecting into said formation by means of a well a measured volume of fluid which is unsaturated with said immobile fluid and which has limited solubility for said immobile fluid, selecting the amount of said injected fluid to create a liquid front with a first fluid volume before said front and a second fluid volume between said front and said well such that at least a measurable portion of said injected fluid within said formation remains unsaturated with said fluid of said immobile phase;
- producing said injected fluid by means of said well in an amount sufficient to determine the volume of injected fluid substantially unsaturated with immobile fluid by measuring the volume of said injected fluid substantially unsaturated with immobile liquid produced from the well as indicted by an appreciable increase in concentration of said immobile fluid in said mobile fluid which characterizes the location of said front, said front being characterized by a substantial increase in the amount of said immobile fluid in said injected fluid;
- whereby said measured volume is taken as the unknown V.sub.2 in the equation as follows: ##EQU2## Where S.sub.gr = residual gas saturation, fraction of reservoir pore volume;
- C.sub.s = the concentration of gas dissolved in the injected liquid when the injected liquid is saturated with the gas at reservoir conditions (moles/liter);
- C.sub.g = moles of residual gas per unit volume of residual gas at reservoir temperature and pressure (moles/liter);
- V.sub.1 = the total volume of liquid injected into the reservoir (liters);
- V.sub.2 = the volume of produced liquid which corresponds to the volume of injected liquid between the wellbore and the front where the gas concentration in the produced liquid changes from the original injected gas concentration to saturated gas concentration C.sub.s (liters).
- 2. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the injected fluid is aqueous.
- 3. The method as defined in claim 2 wherein the aqueous fluid is brine.
- 4. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the injected fluid is a hydrocarbon.
- 5. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the injected fluid contains a trace chemical.
- 6. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the immobile fluid phase is natural gas.
- 7. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the immobile fluid phase is aqueous.
- 8. The method as defined in claim 7 wherein the immobile fluid is formation water.
- 9. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the mobile fluid is aqueous.
- 10. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the mobile fluid is a hydrocarbon.
- 11. The method as defined by claim 10 wherein the hydrocarbon fluid is crude oil.
- 12. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the injected fluid is miscible with the mobile fluid phase.
- 13. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the injected fluid is substantially soluble with the mobile fluid phase.
- 14. A method for determining the relative amounts of two fluid phases in a subterranean formation wherein one of the phases is mobile and the other is essentially immobile comprising:
- injecting into the formation by means of a well a fluid unsaturated with the immobile fluid and having limited solubility with the immobile fluid in an amount such that a portion of the injected fluid within the formation remains unsaturated with immobile fluid;
- producing the injected fluid by means of the well in an amount sufficient to produce injected fluid saturated with immobile fluid at the formation temperature and pressure; and
- measuring the concentration of immobile fluid dissolved in the produced fluid, the produced fluid volume, the temperature of the formation, and the fluid pressure of the formation.
- 15. A method for determining the relative amounts of two fluid phases in a subterranean reservoir formation wherein one of the phases is mobile and the other is essentially immobile comprising
- injecting into the formation by means of a well a measured volume of fluid unsaturated with the immobile fluid and having limited solubility with the immobile fluid in an amount such that a portion of the injected fluid in the formation remains unsaturated with immobile fluid;
- producing the injected fluid by means of the well in an amount sufficient to produce injected fluid saturated with immobile fluid at the reservoir temperature and pressure;
- measuring the concentration of immobile fluid dissolved in the produced fluid and measuring the produced fluid volume as a function of the concentration to determine the volume of injected fluid unsaturated with immobile fluid and to determine the amount of immobile fluid per unit volume of the injected fluid which is saturated with immobile fluid at reservoir conditions;
- measuring the temperature and pressure of the formation to determine the amount of immobile fluid per unit volume of immobile fluid at reservoir conditions; and
- relating the amount of immobile fluid per unit volume of the injected fluid which is saturated with immobile fluid at reservoir conditions, the amount of immobile fluid per unit volume of immobile fluid at reservoir conditions, the volume of fluid injected into the formation and the volume of produced fluid unsaturated with immobile fluid to determine the relative amounts of the mobile and immobile fluid phases in the subterranean formation.
- 16. In a method of determining the relative amounts of two fluid phases in a subterranean reservoir wherein one of the phases is mobile and the other is essentially immobile wherein fluids are injected into a formation by means of a well and fluids are produced from the formation by means of the well, wherein the relation ##EQU3## is utilized for determining the relative amounts of the two fluid phases in the reservoir, wherein
- S.sub.gr = immobile fluid saturation, fraction of reservoir pore volume;
- C.sub.s = the concentration of immobile fluid dissolved in the injected fluid when the injected fluid is saturated with the immobile fluid at reservoir conditions;
- C.sub.g = the amount of immobile fluid per unit volume of immobile fluid at reservoir temperature and pressure;
- V.sub.1 = the total volume of fluid injected into the reservoir;
- V.sub.2 = the volume of produced fluid which corresponds to the volume of injected fluid between the wellbore and the front where the immobile fluid concentration in the produced fluid changes from the original injected immobile fluid concentration to saturated immobile fluid concentration;
- the steps comprising:
- injecting into the formation by means of a well a measured volume of fluid unsaturated with the immobile fluid and having limited solubility for the immobile fluid in an amount such that a portion of the injected fluid within the formation remains unsaturated with immobile fluid, said measured volume of fluid being the value of "V.sub.1 ";
- producing the injected fluid by means of the well in an amount sufficient to produce fluid containing immobile fluid;
- measuring the concentration of immobile fluids dissolved in the produced fluid as a function of produced fluid volume to determine a value for "V.sub.2 " and to determine a value for "C.sub.s "; and
- measuring the temperature and pressure of the reservoir to determine a value for "C.sub.g ".
- 17. A method for determining the relative amounts of two fluid phases in a subterranean formation wherein one of the phases is mobile and the other is essentially immobile comprising:
- injecting into the formation by means of a well a measured volume of fluid unsaturated with the immobile fluid and having limited solubility with the immobile fluid in an amount sufficient to dissolve immobile fluid from a portion of the formation pore space;
- producing the injected fluid by means of the well in an amount sufficient to determine the formation pore volume wherein the immobile fluid is substantially dissolved by the injected fluid;
- measuring the concentration of immobile fluid dissolved in the produced fluid as a function of the produced fluid volume to determine the pore volume of the formation wherein the immobile fluid is dissolved by the injected fluid and to determine the concentration of immobile fluid dissolved in the injected fluid when the injected fluid is saturated with immobile fluid at reservoir conditions; and
- measuring the temperature and pressure of the formation to determine the amount of immobile fluid per unit volume of immobile fluid at reservoir temperature and pressure.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
This application is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. Pat. application Ser. No. 647,223, filed Jan. 7, 1976, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
647223 |
Jan 1976 |
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