Review of micro seepage mechanisms in shale gas reservoirs

•Geo-mechanical effects, gas adsorption effects, real gas effects and rarefaction effects were reviewed.•Klinkenberg correction and slip boundary conditions were collected and compared.•Bulk phase gas transporting models are classified into eight types.•Surface diffusion in shale gas reservoirs were...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of heat and mass transfer Vol. 139; pp. 144 - 179
Main Authors Liehui, Zhang, Baochao, Shan, Yulong, Zhao, Zhaoli, Guo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Elsevier Ltd 01.08.2019
Elsevier BV
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:•Geo-mechanical effects, gas adsorption effects, real gas effects and rarefaction effects were reviewed.•Klinkenberg correction and slip boundary conditions were collected and compared.•Bulk phase gas transporting models are classified into eight types.•Surface diffusion in shale gas reservoirs were summarized and compared.•Three types of gas transporting models are categorized. Accurate understanding of gas micro seepage mechanisms in shale plays is of great importance for numerical simulation and productivity prediction. Classical seepage theory fails to build the constitutive relation of fluid flow in shale matrix, while current models show discrepancies from one to another. In this review, current bulk phase gas transporting models in literatures are classified into eight types, where consistency and diversity among them are revealed, with three recommended for shale gas seepage modeling on different purposes. The unification contributes to understand the role of different seepage mechanisms and helps to eliminate the confusion of different roles that each mechanism may play during mathematical modeling and gas production. Different approaches of handling geo-mechanical effects, ad-/de-sorption, real gas effects and rarefaction effects are introduced and compared, with recommended methods given after comparison. Based on practical pore size distribution, in-situ pressure and temperature, five ways of calculating gas mean free paths are compared, after which the possible flow regimes in practical shale plays are divided according to Knudsen number. Various empirical Klinkenberg correction methods and slip boundary conditions are summarized and compared, showing that some are inappropriate to describe rarefaction effects. Different ways of modeling Knudsen and surface diffusion are reviewed and analyzed. Considering the role of viscous flow, slippage effect, Knudsen diffusion and surface diffusion, gas transporting models are categorized into three types. The review provides the recent development and a systematic summarization on analytical modeling of gas transporting as well as the related unique phenomena in shale nanopores, which promotes the understanding of the complex and special micro seepage mechanisms in shale gas reservoirs.
ISSN:0017-9310
1879-2189
DOI:10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2019.04.141