| Literature DB >> 29074953 |
Shu Tao1,2, Dazhen Tang3,4, Hao Xu3,4, Song Li3,4.
Abstract
Coal samples were cut into cores to perform a flow velocity sensitivity (FVS) analysis under varying initial permeability, confining pressures, injection volumes, and injection intensities. The results show that the permeability and the output of the coal fines decrease with an increase in confining pressures at a constant displacement velocity. A critical flow velocity exists for the migration of relatively large coal fines. Below this critical flow velocity, very small coal fines can be transported out of the coal by the fluid, slightly increasing the coal permeability. However, larger coal fines are transported at a higher flow velocity, which may block the effective seepage paths and reduce coal permeability, inducing FVS. Moreover, as the flow velocity and the injection volume increase, the permeability damage rate increases, but the rate of increase in the permeability damage decreases. The damage to the permeability due to FVS mainly occurs in the early stage of coal fines migration, and an abrupt increase in the flow velocity can damage reservoirs and induce substantial coal fines generation. Thus, maintaining a stable effective strength and a controlled depressurization rate during drainage can effectively constrain coal fines output and decrease permeability damage within coal reservoirs.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29074953 PMCID: PMC5658363 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-14295-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Map showing the geographical position of the tectonic units and the stratigraphic column for the coal-bearing strata in the southern Junggar Basin (modified from[26] (I am a co-author)).
Basic information of the prepared coal cores.
| Coal core no. | Porosity (%) |
| Length (cm) | Diameter (cm) | Coal composition (vol.%) | Permeability (mD) | Experimental program | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitrinite | Inertinite | Liptinite | Mineral | |||||||
| CSa0 | 5.018 | 0.74 | 3.421 | 2.554 | 52.14 | 23.21 | 8.62 | 16.39 | 3.693 | A |
| CSa1 | 3.685 | 0.78 | 2.986 | 2.563 | 39.35 | 28.6 | 10.82 | 21.23 | 2.586 | B |
| CSa2 | 4.098 | 0.76 | 4.112 | 2.557 | 48.8 | 30.4 | 8.71 | 12.09 | 2.794 | |
| CSa3 | 4.421 | 0.75 | 3.696 | 2.566 | 51.05 | 24.83 | 7.7 | 16.42 | 3.355 | |
| CSa4 | 5.136 | 0.73 | 3.337 | 2.553 | 34.36 | 33.4 | 10.53 | 21.71 | 3.707 | |
| CSa5 | 6.523 | 0.71 | 3.527 | 2.565 | 50.15 | 20.5 | 4.89 | 24.46 | 5.246 | |
| CSa6 | 6.568 | 0.71 | 3.613 | 2.561 | 46.37 | 36.83 | 5.85 | 10.95 | 5.477 | |
| CSa7 | 6.881 | 0.70 | 3.536 | 2.562 | 59.00 | 20.60 | 11.50 | 8.90 | 6.338 | C |
| CSa8 | 5.364 | 0.74 | 3.341 | 2.558 | 65.10 | 14.90 | 9.10 | 10.90 | 4.283 | D |
| CSa9 | 5.381 | 0.74 | 3.342 | 2.562 | 52.20 | 27.40 | 6.40 | 14.00 | 4.312 | |
Figure 2Diagram of the coal core FVS experimental setup.
Permeability variation and coal fines output at different confining pressures and a constant flow velocity.
| Coal core no. | CSa0 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Confining pressure (MPa) | 4 | 8 | 12 |
| Initial permeability (mD) | 3.693 | ||
| Current permeability (mD) | 3.571 | 2.863 | 2.521 |
| Total mass of the coal fines at the outlet (mg) | 4.8 | 6.9 | 7.3 |
Figure 3Particle size distribution curves of the coal fines at different confining pressures and a constant flow velocity.
Permeability and its maximum damage rate at different flow velocities.
| Coal core no. | CSa1 | CSa2 | CSa3 | CSa4 | CSa5 | CSa6 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial permeability (mD) | 2.586 | 2.794 | 3.355 | 3.707 | 5.246 | 5.477 | |
| Permeability under different flow velocities (mD) | 0.01 (cm3/s) | 2.586 | 2.794 | 3.355 | 3.707 | 5.246 | 5.477 |
| 0.015 (cm3/s) | 2.66 | 2.924 | 3.361 | 3.807 | 5.419 | 5.765 | |
| 0.02 (cm3/s) | 2.679 | 2.829 | 3.363 | 3.841 | 4.904 | 5.052 | |
| 0.03 (cm3/s) | 2.516 | 2.556 | 3.126 | 3.537 | 3.738 | 3.758 | |
| 0.04 (cm3/s) | 2.207 | 2.376 | 2.419 | 2.501 | 3.344 | 3.105 | |
| 0.06 (cm3/s) | 2.068 | 2.102 | 2.233 | 2.312 | 3.077 | 2.964 | |
| 0.08 (cm3/s) | 2.004 | 1.951 | 2.027 | 2.159 | 2.941 | 2.826 | |
| 0.1 (cm3/s) | 1.979 | 1.900 | 1.992 | 2.136 | 2.909 | 2.691 | |
| Permeability decrease under different flow velocity ranges (mD) | 0.01–0.04 (cm3/s) | 0.379 | 0.418 | 0.936 | 1.206 | 1.902 | 2.372 |
| 0.04–0.1 (cm3/s) | 0.228 | 0.476 | 0.427 | 0.365 | 0.435 | 0.414 | |
| Maximum rate of permeability damage (%) | 23.47 | 32 | 40.63 | 42.38 | 44.55 | 50.87 | |
Figure 4Relationship between the flow velocity and coal core permeability.
Figure 5Particle size distribution at different flow velocities.
Permeability damage rate at different flow velocities and different injection volumes.
| Coal core no. | Initial permeability (mD) | Flow velocity (cm3/s) | Cumulative injection volume (cm3) | Current permeability (mD) | Loss of permeability (mD) | Damage rate of permeability (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CSa7 | 6.338 | 0.01 | 10 | 6.203 | 0 | 0 |
| 20 | 6.081 | 0 | ||||
| 30 | 5.902 | 0 | ||||
| 50 | 5.556 | 0 | ||||
| 80 | 4.968 | 0 | ||||
| 0.015 | 90 | 6.203 | 1.37 | 2.13 | ||
| 100 | 6.081 | 4.05 | ||||
| 110 | 5.902 | 6.88 | ||||
| 130 | 5.556 | 12.34 | ||||
| 160 | 4.968 | 21.62 | ||||
| 0.03 | 170 | 4.651 | 1.341 | 26.62 | ||
| 180 | 4.372 | 31.02 | ||||
| 190 | 4.175 | 34.13 | ||||
| 210 | 3.976 | 37.27 | ||||
| 240 | 3.627 | 42.77 | ||||
| 0.05 | 250 | 3.864 | 0.448 | 39.03 | ||
| 260 | 3.784 | 40.30 | ||||
| 270 | 3.537 | 44.19 | ||||
| 290 | 3.338 | 47.33 | ||||
| 320 | 3.179 | 49.84 | ||||
| 0.08 | 330 | 3.196 | 0.264 | 49.57 | ||
| 340 | 3.128 | 50.65 | ||||
| 350 | 3.053 | 51.83 | ||||
| 370 | 2.991 | 52.81 | ||||
| 400 | 2.915 | 54.01 |
Figure 6Relationship between the cumulative injection volume and the permeability damage rate at different flow velocities.
Permeability damage rate with different approaches for increasing the flow velocity.
| Coal core no. | Initial permeability (mD) | Flow velocity (cm3/s) | Maximum damage rate of permeability (%) | Total mass of coal fines from the outlet (mg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CSa8 | 4.283 | 0 → 0.01 → 0.02 → 0.05 → 0.1 | 44.38 | 10.15 |
| CSa9 | 4.312 | 0 → 0.1 | 59.26 | 19.18 |
Figure 7Illustrative diagram of coal fine migration during the drainage process of CBM wells.