This invention relates to investigations of porous media, more particularly to nuclear magnetic relaxation (NMR) methods and apparatus for determining the wettability and other parameters of such media.
Nuclear magnetic relaxation methods offer a variety of opportunities for characterizing the molecular dynamics in confined environments. Systems of interest are high surface area materials including biological tissues, chromatographic supports, heterogeneous catalytic materials and natural porous materials such as clay minerals and rocks.
Nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion (NMRD) consists in measuring the observables of relaxation as a function of the magnetic field. It enlarges drastically the timescale and lengthscale of observation of the molecular dynamics especially in porous media.
NMR has been a common laboratory technique for over forty years and has become an important tool in formation evaluation. General background of NMR well logging can be found, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,023,551 to Kleinberg et al., which is assigned to the same assignee as the present invention and herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
NMR relies upon the fact that the nuclei of many chemical elements have intrinsic angular momentum (“spin”) and a magnetic moment. In an externally applied static magnetic field, the spins of nuclei align themselves along the direction of the static field. This equilibrium situation can be disturbed by a pulse of an oscillating magnetic field (e. g., a radio frequency (rf) pulse) that tips the spins away from the static field direction. The angle through which the spins are tipped is given by θ=γ*B1tP, where γ is the gyromagnetic ratio, B1 is the linearly polarized oscillating field strength, and tP, is the duration of the pulse. Tipping pulses of 90 and 180 degrees are most common.
After tipping, two things occur simultaneously. First, the spins precess around the direction of the static field at the Larmor frequency, given by ω0=γ*B0, where B0 is the strength of the static field and γ is the gyromagnetic ratio. For hydrogen nuclei, γ/2Π equals 4258 Hz/Gauss. Secondly, the spins return to the equilibrium direction according to a decay time, T1, which is known as the spin-lattice or longitudinal relaxation time.
Also associated with the spin of molecular nuclei is a second relaxation time, T2, called the spin-spin or transverse relaxation time. At the end of a 90-degree tipping pulse, all the spins are pointed in a common direction perpendicular, or transverse, to the static field, and precess at the Larmor frequency. However, due to small fluctuations in the static field induced by other spins or paramagnetic impurities, the spins precess at slightly different frequencies, so that the transverse magnetization dephases with a relaxation time constant T2.
Most NMR logging operations measure the spin-lattice (longitudinal) relaxation times (T1) and/or spin-spin (transverse) relaxation times (T2) of hydrogen nuclei. In addition, some NMR logging tools may provide a ratio of T1/T2 directly, and other NMR tools can provide diffusion constants (D) and combined D-T2 plots.
Various pulse sequences are available for measuring the NMR relaxation times. For example, T1 relaxation may be measured using an inversion-recovery or a simple spin-echo pulse sequence or any of their derivatives. The T2 relaxation is often measured from a train of spin-echoes that are generated with a series of pulses such as the Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) pulse sequence or some variant of this. The CPMG pulse sequence is well known in the art. (See Meiboom, S., Gill, D., 1958, “Modified Spin Echo Method for Measuring Nuclear Relaxation Times,” Review of Scientific Instruments, 29, 688-91).
Wettability of oil/water liquids mixtures measured in porous rocks is one of the most critical parameters for oil recovery with porosity and permeability. Roughly, wettability is the ability of a fluid to spread over or “wet” a solid surface. It influences saturation, pore distribution and flow of fluids in porous materials. Nowadays, wettability is mainly measured by macroscopic measurements such as contact angles and capillary pressure curves (Amott and USBM methods).
Methods to determine the wettability of liquids in a porous media are described in various publications and patents. Among those patents are the co-owned U.S. Pat. No. 6,765,380 to Freedman et al., the co-owned U.S. Pat. No. 6,883,702 to Hurliman et al., and the published U.S. patent application 2006/0132131 to Fleury et al.
Studies relating to the frequency dispersion of the spin-lattice relaxation rate 1/T1 can be for example found in the references:
In the light of the prior art, it is an object of the invention to provide alternative methods for determining wettability and other parameters of a sample of a porous media. More specifically, it is seen as an object of the present invention to provide a quantitative in situ method for determining directly the wettability of liquids and other parameters of a sample of a porous media.
The present invention introduces a new method for determining the dynamical parameters of fluids embedded in various porous media. This method is based on nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion (NMRD), the measurement of proton spin-lattice relaxation rates 1/T1 as a function of magnetic field strength or nuclear Larmor frequency.
In a preferred embodiment the method is used to determine the wettability of a porous media exploiting the very different relaxation features of the proton NMRD of oil and water in various cases of saturation, particularly for carbonate rocks of different porosities and permeabilities.
The benefit of exploring a very large range of low frequency is to isolate the typical dispersion features associated with the different processes of molecular surface dynamics. This allows an experimental separation of the surface and bulk microdynamics of oil and water even for a multiphasic saturation.
In a preferred embodiment, the invention includes the step of obtaining the saturation of phases in the media also obtained from this new method.
The preferred range of the Larmor frequency is 10 kHz to 20 MHz
In a further preferred embodiment of the invention a ratio of a surface residence time τs and a translational or diffusion correlation time τm or any parameter equivalent to said ratio is used to define a wettability index using for example the values of A=τs/τm from 1 to infinity.
In a further preferred embodiment of the invention the existence of different dispersion curves in the signals are used to derive information relating to the pore size distribution in the porous medium.
In a further preferred embodiment of the invention the signals are obtained by a nuclear magnetic logging tool measuring signals at different radial distances from a wellbore, preferably from radial distances where the formation has an essentially equal saturation of the fluid .
Further details, examples and aspects of the invention will be described below referring to the following drawings.
The magnetic field dependence of the longitudinal nuclear spin relaxation rate 1/T1 (NMRD) is a rich source of dynamical information. Varying the magnetic field changes the Larmor frequency, and thus, the fluctuations to which the nuclear spin relaxation is sensitive.
The magnetic field dependence of the spin-lattice relaxation rate, 1/T1, provides a good test of the theories linking its measurement to the micro-dynamical behavior of the liquid. In confined systems, such as porous media, reduced dimensionality and Brownian diffusion may force more frequent reencounters between spin-bearing bulk molecules and concentrations of paramagnetic centers at the pore surface (like iron or manganese ions). This effect modifies the correlation functions in the relaxation equations in a fundamental way; the paramagnetic centers provide a large magnetic moment and local dipolar field in which the diffusing liquid spins move.
A paramagnetic site has an electronic spin creating a large magnetic moment unambiguously dominating the proton spin-lattice relaxation (the gyro-magnetic ratio of an electron γs is 659 times greater than the gyro-magnetic ratio γl of the proton).
In general, two classes of high surface area systems exists: solid phases that are proton-rich such as biological macromolecules including proteins, carbohydrates, and engineering polymers like polystyrene, and those that are proton-poor such as micro-porous glasses, zeolithes, clay minerals and rocks.
For the first class of high surface area systems cross-relaxation between the protons of the liquid and those of the solid may make dominant contributions to the nature of the magnetic field dependence of the nuclear spin relaxation rate observed.
For the second class of high surface area systems, the proton-poor solids, the two main effects dominate the liquid spin relaxation depend on the dynamical aspect of the molecular motion and the potential chemical exchange of protons at the solid surface. A protic traveling molecule (for instance water) can be trapped in the ligand field of a paramagnetic ion by a selective chemical binding whilst an aprotic traveling molecule (for instance alkane) may not be trapped to a paramagnetic ion but may stay close to the surface long enough to exhibit 2-Dimensional (2D) diffusion on the surface. As shown below, these physical-chemistry considerations of the proton spin-bearing molecules at a surface can be linked directly to wettability.
Based partly on prior art as expressed for example in the literature references cited above, two different ways of modeling the relaxation rates associated with protic and aprotic molecules are developed in the following. The first model applies to the case of protic or wetting molecules and the second model to aprotic or non-wetting molecules. The latter model includes also a parameter to describe the transition of the model from non-wetting to wetting behavior of the molecules.
For a non-wetting liquid, each traveling proton may not display affinity with the pore wall and thus will have a very short surface residence time τs, i.e. close to the magnitude of the translational correlation time τm, , which in turn corresponds to the duration of an individual molecular jump at the surface. However for the correlation times it is still preferred to have τs/τm>1, as otherwise with τs/τm=1, the surface contribution as detailed by Eqs. [1] and [2] below tends to zero and the overall spin-lattice relaxation rate tends to the constant bulk term. For a low value of A=τs/τm>1 characteristic of a lack of dynamical affinity, one observes in a succession of plateau and slight relaxation decreases in the behavior of the nuclear magnetic spin-lattice relaxation dispersion (NMRD). So, when interpreted for example with a model based on Eq. [2] below, the NMRD provides a direct reliable value of surface diffusion coefficient, specific surface area and average pore size. The behavior of the NMRD under this condition is independent of the ligand properties of the paramagnetic sites.
For a wetting liquid, the proton spin-bearing molecule have the tendency to stay much longer in the proximity of the surface, leading to a much longer surface residence time τs thereby increasing the probability of the proton to be bound to a paramagnetic site.
In case the molecule is trapped in the ligand field of the paramagnetic site, its typical NMRD has a plateau at low frequency due to the electronic spin-lattice relaxation time T1,param and a peak at higher frequencies. This behavior can be for example observed in the well-known contrast agent for magnetic resonance imaging or MRI.
Even when the aprotic molecule is not trapped, it can still be expected to display a surface residence time τs much longer than the translational correlation time τm. In this case, like in the non-wetting case described above, the liquids show a true bilogarithmic behavior of the nuclear magnetic spin-lattice relaxation dispersion (NMRD). However, in contrast to the non-wetting fluid the dynamical surface affinity parameter A=τs/τm will now have a very high value, i.e. A=τs/τm>>1, which can be derived from the data.
The importance of the ratio A to distinguish between wetting and non-wetting molecules as shown in
The qualitative considerations presented above are in the following used in two different mathematical models, one of which models the bilogarithmic behavior of the nuclear magnetic spin-lattice relaxation dispersion (NMRD) for low and high values of A, while the second model can be applied to molecules trapped by paramagnetic sites.
The model of nuclear relaxation of a molecule undergoing 2-D diffusion close to a pore surface without being affected by a ligand field is hence applicable when the paramagnetic sites do not create a ligand field trapping a polar molecule, either because the fluid is non wetting (i.e. far from the paramagnetic site) or because the paramagnetic sites are not accessible, for example buried “far” from the pore surface or screened by another wetting fluid.
Moreover, the model of this example assumes that the limit of fast-diffusion where the biphasic fast exchange model between surface and bulk molecules is valid even in macro-porous media with a very small surface to volume ratio. The overall frequency dependency of the proton relaxation rate 1/T1 for this model can then be written as a linear combination of a bulk term 1/T1, bulk and a frequency dependent surface term:
where Ns/N=λ*Ss/V is the ratio of number of liquid molecules in a surface layer of size λ at proximity of the pore surface (
As detailed in the above cited references, the following quantitative expression can be applied to the case of a aprotic liquid embedded in pores:
In equation [2] Sp is the specific surface area of the solid rock, and ρsolid and ρliquid are the densities of the rock and liquid, respectively. Substituting the surface to volume ratio with Sp leads to NSurface/N=λ*Sp *ρliquid. The distance δ is the average distance of minimal approach between the protons of the non wetting liquid and the paramagnetic ions on the surface. S is the spin of the paramagnetic ions (S=5/2 for Mn2+) in the solid. The unknown parameters in this model are ηs the number of paramagnetic ions per gram of solid material, the length scale ξ, which correspond to the first layer of paramagnetic ions within the solid and the two correlation times τm and τs.
Displayed in
The second model used in this example of the invention, also referred to as nuclear paramagnetic relaxation model, is based is based on the nuclear relaxation of a molecule trapped in a ligand field of a paramagnetic site. In case the proton spin-bearing molecule stays in the ligand field of the paramagnetic ions, the overall relaxation rate 1/T1 can be presented as a linear combination of a bulk and nuclear paramagnetic term:
where N param/N is the ratio of number of liquid molecules bonded to the paramagnetic molecule or sink at the surface and in the bulk, respectively.
Following the general theory of nuclear paramagnetic relaxation as documented for example in the original reference:
where ε=0.3 nm is the molecular size of water and T1,param is the electronic spin-lattice relaxation time (of the order of 10−11s for the paramagnetic impurities).
Provided 1/T1,bulk is known, the remaining undetermined parameters in this model are ηs, the number of paramagnetic ions per gram of solid material; the length scale ξ which correspond to the first layer of paramagnetic ions within the solid; and the electronic spin-lattice relaxation time T1,param.
The frequency dependency of the model represented by equation [4] is essentially flat at low frequencies and shows a characteristic peak at higher frequencies. Its typical shape is shown as curve 22 in
The following description and figures include examples of the novel methods and tools illustrating the application of the above derived models to determine wettability and further useful parameters. To further illustrate features of the invention based on measured data, samples of carbonate rock are investigated in a laboratory using a fast field cycling NMR spectrometer FFC commercially available from Steal s.r.l., Mede, Italy. The first sample A is a grainstone carbonate with 30% porosity and 700 mD permeability. The second sample B is a packstone carbonate with 11-12% porosity and 4-5 mD permeability.
To measure the proton relaxation rate 1/T1 spins were polarized at 15 MHz and free-induction decays were recorded following a single 90° excitation pulse of duration 5.8 s applied at 11 MHz. The temperature was fixed at 298 K. The experiment is repeated for a large range of Larmor frequency (10 kHz-20 MHz) to obtain the complete dispersion curve of 1/T1.
In a first step, the exact amount of paramagnetic impurities in each sample is established.
The proton relaxation rate 1/T1 NMRD for Larmor frequencies in the range between 10 kHz-20 MHz of single phase saturations of dodecane in sample B are shown in
This proves that a unique nuclear relaxation process is responsible for these NMRD features, namely the modulation of dipolar interaction by 2D translational diffusion of a non wetting liquid (equation [2]) that can be fitted with a translational diffusion correlation time τm=1.1 ns and a surface residence time τs of 110 ns. It is interesting to note that these two parameters can be derived from the measurements without using all the parameters of the prefactor in equation [2]. The low value of the dynamical surface affinity A=τs/τm=100 supports the interpretation of dodecane as a non-wetting aprotic liquid.
Similar measurements of brine in sample A are shown in
In
In
It will be understood that processing can be performed downhole and/or uphole, and that some of the processing may be performed at a remote location. The new methods and tools in accordance with the present invention can be used either in laboratories on core samples or in-situ, i.e., directly in a wellbore using the formation rock as sample. Also, while a wireline tool is illustrated below, alternative forms of physical support and communicating link can be used, for example in a measurement while drilling system.
The frequency dependent NMR T1 signal can be obtained in the laboratory using for instance a Field Cycling NMR relaxometer. The proposed methodology can be applied for laboratory measurement on cores, either preserved cores, or artificially saturated with various fluids, for instance wettability modifiers or any chemical additive to be controlled with respect to wettability. The measurements on cores can be used for calibration purpose with the aim to carry out quantitative measurements with a logging tool.
In in-situ application the frequency dependent NMR T1 signal can be obtained in a well, using for instance the commercially available MR Scanner (TM of Schlumberger) or an equivalent tool. The MR Scanner is capable of measuring T1 distributions in the range of 0.5 to 2 Mhz and diffusion (D)-T2plots. The frequencies correspond to different radial depth shells around the wellbore, as described for example in the document SPE 84482 “A next generation wireline NMR logging tool by DePavia et al.
As the T1 signals are obtained from different depth shells, the saturations of the formation fluids at these location may vary thus causing an error when applying the methods describe above. To reduce or eliminate this potential source of error from the measurement, the radial depth shells with essentially uniform saturations are selected and only T1 measurements from the selected depth shells are consider for the modeling. The radial depth shells with uniform saturations can be identified using for example the D-T2 plots provided by the same tool. This procedure allows plotting the affinity parameter A at each logging position resulting in wettability as the function of logging depth.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08290674 | Jul 2008 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2009/049810 | 7/7/2009 | WO | 00 | 4/14/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/005967 | 1/14/2010 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5023551 | Kleinberg et al. | Jun 1991 | A |
6765380 | Freedman et al. | Jul 2004 | B2 |
6883702 | Hurlimann et al. | Apr 2005 | B2 |
20030169040 | Hurlimann et al. | Sep 2003 | A1 |
20040000905 | Freedman et al. | Jan 2004 | A1 |
20040008027 | Prammer | Jan 2004 | A1 |
20060132131 | Fleury et al. | Jun 2006 | A1 |
Entry |
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20110181277 A1 | Jul 2011 | US |