textAltering the wettability of reservoir rock using fluoro-chemical treatments has proved to be a viable solution to the condensate blocking problem in gas wells. Alteration of rock wettability to neutral-wet is the primary reason for improvement in gas and condensate relative permeabilities. Stability/compatibility test, drop tests and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis along with core flood results were used to characterize wettability changes. XPS tests, drop tests, and relative permeability measurements were conducted and correlated with each other. It is shown that XPS analysis and imbibition tests provide a quantitative measure of chemical adsorption and surface modification, but only a qualitative measure of the poss...
textMany producing volatile oil reservoirs experience a significant decrease in well deliverability ...
AbstractAn accurate description of the surface chemistry of the reservoir rock–fluid system is essen...
Rock became more CO2 wet with increasing pressure, temperature and brine salinities and less CO2 wet...
textAltering the wettability of reservoir rock using fluoro-chemical treatments has proved to be a v...
During production from gas condensate reservoirs, significant productivity loss occurs after the pre...
Over the recent decades, gas-condensate reservoirs have attracted increasing attention from many ene...
textMany gas wells suffer a loss in productivity due to liquid accumulation in the near wellbore reg...
Well productivity in gas condensate reservoirs is reduced by condensate banking when the bottom hol...
Liquid condensation in the reservoir near a wellbore may kill gas production in gas-condensate reser...
textGas wells suffer a decrease in productivity because of the formation of a liquid hydrocarbon “co...
The wettability of Berea and chalk samples for gas-oil and gas-water fluids were altered from strong...
Gas condensate reservoirs are generally recovered using a pressure depletion drive. Gas can condensa...
Gas-wetting alteration is a versatile and effective approach for alleviating liquid-blockage that oc...
W ettability is one of the main factors that affected the recovery of oil and gas in a reservoir. A...
textExperiments were performed to investigate the effect of condensate and water blocking on gas pr...
textMany producing volatile oil reservoirs experience a significant decrease in well deliverability ...
AbstractAn accurate description of the surface chemistry of the reservoir rock–fluid system is essen...
Rock became more CO2 wet with increasing pressure, temperature and brine salinities and less CO2 wet...
textAltering the wettability of reservoir rock using fluoro-chemical treatments has proved to be a v...
During production from gas condensate reservoirs, significant productivity loss occurs after the pre...
Over the recent decades, gas-condensate reservoirs have attracted increasing attention from many ene...
textMany gas wells suffer a loss in productivity due to liquid accumulation in the near wellbore reg...
Well productivity in gas condensate reservoirs is reduced by condensate banking when the bottom hol...
Liquid condensation in the reservoir near a wellbore may kill gas production in gas-condensate reser...
textGas wells suffer a decrease in productivity because of the formation of a liquid hydrocarbon “co...
The wettability of Berea and chalk samples for gas-oil and gas-water fluids were altered from strong...
Gas condensate reservoirs are generally recovered using a pressure depletion drive. Gas can condensa...
Gas-wetting alteration is a versatile and effective approach for alleviating liquid-blockage that oc...
W ettability is one of the main factors that affected the recovery of oil and gas in a reservoir. A...
textExperiments were performed to investigate the effect of condensate and water blocking on gas pr...
textMany producing volatile oil reservoirs experience a significant decrease in well deliverability ...
AbstractAn accurate description of the surface chemistry of the reservoir rock–fluid system is essen...
Rock became more CO2 wet with increasing pressure, temperature and brine salinities and less CO2 wet...