4.4 Article

Experimental research of gas shale electrical properties by NMR and the combination of imbibition and drainage

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICS AND ENGINEERING
Volume 12, Issue 4, Pages 610-619

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1088/1742-2132/12/4/610

Keywords

gas shale; spontaneous imbibition; semi-permeable plate drainage; short TE NMR; electrical properties; conductivity contribution

Funding

  1. National Nature Science Foundation of China [41204084, 41374124]
  2. Shandong Province Natural Science Foundation [ZR2012DQ007]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [14CX05013A]

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Gas shale has shown considerable force in gas production worldwide, but little attention has been paid to its electrical properties, which are essential for reservoir evaluation and differentiating absorbed gas and free gas. In this study, experiments are designed to research water saturation establishment methods and electrical properties of gas shale. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) with short echo space (TE) is used to identify water saturation and distribution of saturated pores which contribute to the conductivity. The experimental results indicate that NMR with shorter TE can estimate porosity and fluid distribution better than NMR with longer TE. A full range of water saturation is established by the combination of new-type spontaneous imbibition and semi-permeable plate drainage techniques. Spontaneous imbibition gains water saturation from 0% to near irreducible water saturation, and, semipermeable plate drainage desaturates from 100% to irreducible water saturation. The RI-Sw curve shows a nonlinear relationship, and can be divided into three parts with different behaviors. The comparative analysis of transverse relaxation time (T-2) distribution and RI-Sw curves, indicates that free water, and water trapped by capillarity in the non-clay matrix, differ in terms of electrical conductivity from water absorbed in clay. The new experiments prove the applicability of imbibition, drainage and NMR in investigating electrical properties of gas shale and differentiating fluid distribution which makes contribution to conductivity.

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