19–22 May 2026
Europe/Paris timezone

Pore-scale Imaging and Modeling of CO2-Brine Relative Permeability Reduction and Hysteresis in a Reservoir Carbonate

22 May 2026, 12:05
15m
Oral Presentation (MS05) Physics of multiphase flow in diverse porous media MS05

Speaker

Rukuan CHAI (Imperial College London)

Description

We conducted steady-state CO2 – brine relative permeability experiments on a reservoir carbonate sample, integrated with in-situ X-ray microtomography imaging under capillary-dominated conditions. We observed low CO2 relative permeability with a maximum value of 0.3 and significant hysteresis between drainage and imbibition, accompanied by a high residual CO2 saturation of 0.27 from a maximum initial saturation of 0.43. Pore-scale imaging captured the dynamic evolution of CO2 ganglia: during initial drainage, CO2 occupied large pores with a normalized Euler characteristic of 5 mm-3; as drainage progressed, CO2 connectivity increased, yielding a Euler characteristic of -16 mm-3 at the end. In contrast, imbibition induced fragmentation of CO2 clusters, disrupting connectivity with a normalized Euler characteristic of 19 mm-3 at the end point. Pore occupancy analysis showed that CO2 initially displaced brine from larger pores during drainage, then increasingly from smaller ones as saturation increased; during imbibition, swelling water layers in small throats triggered snap-off events. These behaviors arose from pronounced structural heterogeneity (variable pore-throat sizes and poor connectivity) combined with strong water-wet properties, as evidenced by contact angles of 36° to 42° and supporting curvature measurements. The behavior could be reproduced by a quasi-static pore-network model: 17% of the throat-filling events in imbibition were snap-off that led to a high residual CO2 saturation. Limited pore-space connectivity explained the low relative permeabilities that were measured. This work provides direct insights into CO2 flow dynamics in porous media, advancing the optimization of CO2 storage practices.

Country UK
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Authors

Rukuan CHAI (Imperial College London) Dr Sajjad Foroughi (Imperial College London) Ms Qianqian Ma (Imperial College London) Dr Foo Yoong Yow (Petroliam Nasional Berhad, PETRONAS, Selangor, Malaysia) Prof. Branko Bijeljic (Imperial College London) Prof. Martin Blunt (Imperial College London)

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