Unfortunately this page does not have a mobile or narrow screen view. Please switch to a desktop computer or increase the size of your browser. For tablets try flipping the screen.

Data Publication

X-ray Microtomography of Intermittency in Multiphase Flow at Steady State Using a Differential Imaging Method

Martin Blunt, Imperial College London | Ying Gao, Imperial College London | Qatar Carbonates and Carbon Storage Research Centre

British Geological Survey - National Geoscience Data Centre (UKRI/NERC)

(2018)

The images in this dataset are a sample of Bentheimer Sandstone from a micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) scan acquired with a voxel resolution of 6.00µm. We imaged the steady state flow of brine and decane in Bentheimer sandstone. We devised an experimental method based on differential imaging to examine how flow rate impacts the pore-scale distribution of fluids during coinjection. This allows us to elucidate flow regimes (connected, or breakup of the nonwetting phase pathways) for a range of fractional flows at two capillary numbers, Ca, namely 3.0E-7 and 7.5E-6. At the lower Ca, for a fixed fractional flow, the two phases appear to flow in connected unchanging subnetworks of the pore space, consistent with conventional theory. At the higher Ca, we observed that a significant fraction of the pore space contained sometimes oil and sometimes brine during the 1 h scan: this intermittent occupancy, which was interpreted as regions of the pore space that contained both fluid phases for some time, is necessary to explain the flow and dynamic connectivity of the oil phase; pathways of always oil-filled portions of the void space did not span the core. This phase was segmented from the differential image between the 30 wt % KI brine image and the scans taken at each fractional flow. Using the grey scale histogram distribution of the raw images, the oil proportion in the intermittent phase was calculated. The pressure drops at each fractional flow at low and high flow rates were measured by high precision differential pressure sensors. The relative permeabilities and fractional flow obtained by our experiment at the mm-scale compare well with data from the literature on cm-scale samples.

Keywords


Originally assigned keywords
differential imaging
steadystate
decanbrine
fractional flow
relative permeability
microCT
voxel resolution
porescale

Corresponding MSL vocabulary keywords
relative permeability

MSL enriched keywords
Measured property
permeability
relative permeability
sedimentary rock
sandstone
liquid phase
salt brine
decane
measured property
calcium
Technique
imaging (3D)
computed tomography (CT)

MSL enriched sub domains i

rock and melt physics
geochemistry
microscopy and tomography


Source publisher

British Geological Survey - National Geoscience Data Centre (UKRI/NERC)


DOI

10.5285/db27d484-55b9-4897-9f0a-3d7de343d2c6


Authors

Martin Blunt, Imperial College London

Ying Gao, Imperial College London

Qatar Carbonates and Carbon Storage Research Centre


Contributers

British Geological Survey

Distributor


Citiation

Martin Blunt, I. C. L., Ying Gao, I. C. L., & Qatar Carbonates And Carbon Storage Research Centre. (2018). X-ray Microtomography of Intermittency in Multiphase Flow at Steady State Using a Differential Imaging Method [Data set]. British Geological Survey. https://doi.org/10.5285/DB27D484-55B9-4897-9F0A-3D7DE343D2C6