Abstract:
An experimental stand has been developed to study the hydrodynamics of the "oil-supercritical CO$_2$" flow in a homogeneous porous terrigenous medium at pressures up to
25 MPa and temperatures up to 473K. The experimental stand makes it possible to measure the solubility of carbon dioxide in oil and oil in carbon dioxide during non-stationary
filtration of the oil-supercritical CO$_2$ system in a low-permeability homogeneous porous
medium in a dynamic mode. The study of the solubility of the model low-viscosity oil
when displacing it from the model of a terrigenous homogeneous oil reservoir, the study
of the dynamic viscosity of the liquid substance "oil-supercritical CO$_2$". Based on the obtained experimental data on the thermophysical properties of the systems "oil-supercritical CO$_2$", a mathematical model of the process of unsteady filtration of the flow "oil-supercritical CO$_2$" in a low-permeability homogeneous porous medium has been developed. The problem was solved numerically by the finite difference method. In the process of sampling, a scheme was used implicit in pressure and explicit in saturation (the socalled IMPES method). Namely, for each moment of time, the pressure was calculated
from a system of linear equations, while the saturation was taken from the previous time
layer. Then the saturation was recalculated explicitly using the found pressures. When
discretizing the derivative for adjacent nodes, the permeability is taken from the node in
which the pressure is higher (that is, the “upstream” scheme was used). The convergence
of the solution was controlled by performing numerical experiments on condensed grids.
The developed mathematical model made it possible to calculate the values of the displacement coefficient of real oil. The mechanisms of increased oil recovery from permeable and low-permeability porous media have been identified.