Wettability
Wettability
Wettability
By
Dr. Mohamed Mahmoud
241
Core analysis directed on reservoir properties—overview
2
Definition of Wettability
Wettability is the tendency of one fluid to spread on or
adhere to a solid surface in the presence of other immiscible
fluids. In the petroleum context, wettability is the tendency of
a reservoir rock surface to preferentially contact a particular
fluid in a multiphase or two-phase fluid system.
OilfieldWiki
3
• Wettability is the ability of
1. a liquid to maintain contact
2. with a solid surface
3. in the presence of another fluid; liquid or gas.
• Wettability is
– a three phase (W for water, O for Oil, & S for solid)
phenomena.
– controlled by the balance between the intermolecular
forces between
• adhesive (liquid to surface) and
• cohesive (liquid to fluid) forces.
4
Wettability
6
Cohesion and Adhesion
• The force of cohesion is defined as the force of attraction
between molecules of the same substance.
7
Occurrence of Wettability
• Wettability is a result of intermolecular
interactions when the liquid(s) and solid are
brought together.
8
Importance of Wettability
• Relative permeability
• Capillary pressure
• Electrical parameters
• Oil Recovery
9
Concept of Wettability
Surface tension:
• The work required to increase the size of the
surface of a phase is referred to as the surface
tension.
• As a measure of work per unit area or force
per wetted length.
• The liquid surface is in contact with gas (air)
or its vapor.
• Surface tension has the unit N/m or
dynes/cm.
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Concept of Wettability
Interfacial tension:
11
Wettability
• Measurement of Wettability:
Direct Indirect
Contact angle Relative Perm.
USBM Capillary Press.
Amott index
Wettability
Wettability:
(a)definition of the angle q
and interfacial tension
terms;
and 180°
17
Measuring Methods of Surface and
Interfacial Tensions
Ring method: (Du Noüy)
The force acting on an optimally wettable ring as a result
of the tension of the withdrawn liquid lamella when
removing the ring is measured in this method.
Plate method: (Wilhelmy)
The force acting on an optimally wettable plate which is
immersed vertically in the liquid is measured in this
method.
Rod method
As the plate method, wherein a cylindrical rod with a
smaller wetted length is used for measurement with a
smaller liquid volume. 18
Ring and Plate Methods
19
Measuring Methods of Surface and
Interfacial Tensions
Bubble pressure method:
The maximum internal pressure of a gas bubble which is
formed in a liquid by means of a capillary is measured.
20
Bubble Pressure & Drop Volume
Tensiometers
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Measuring Methods of Surface and
Interfacial Tensions
Pendant drop method:
The shape of a drop suspended from a needle is
determined from the surface/interfacial tension and the
weight of the drop.
Can control pressure and temperature.
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Pendant Drop Tensiometer
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Spinning Drop Tensiometer
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Contact Angle Measurement
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Young’s Equation
Wettability represents a balance of forces that occur at the
interface between three phases, one of which is a solid. The
equation describing this balance was first developed by
Young. For an oil, water, and solid system, the equation
would be:
os − ws + ow cos(qC ) = 0
ws − os
cos(qC ) =
ow
σos = interfacial energy between oil and solid
σws = interfacial energy between water and solid
σow = interfacial tension between oil and water
θC = contact angle
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Young’s Equation
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Contact Angle and Wettability
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Classification of Petroleum
Reservoirs Wettability
• Water wet
• Oil wet
• Neutral or Intermediate
• Fractional (heterogeneous wetting)
• Mixed wettability
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Classification of Petroleum
Reservoirs Wettability
• Water wet
Water preferentially wets the reservoir rock, when the
contact angle qo between the rock and water is less than
90o .
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Classification of Petroleum
Reservoirs Wettability
• Oil wet
Oil preferentially wets the reservoir rock, when
the contact angle is greater than 90o.
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Classification of Petroleum Reservoirs
Wettability
• Water wet and Oil wet
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Classification of Petroleum Reservoirs
Wettability
• Neutral or Intermediate
No preference is shown by the rock to either fluid; i.e.,
equally wet.
Neutral wettability case would exist at a contact angle of 90o.
34
Fractional Wettability
(Heterogeneous Wetting)
• Portions of the rock are strongly oil wet, whereas other
portions are strongly water wet.
• Occurs due to variation in minerals with different surface
chemical properties.
• Silicate water interface is acidic, therefore basic constituents
in oils will readily be absorbed resulting in an water-wet
surface.
• In contrast, the carbonate water interface is basic and will
attract and absorb acid compounds.
• Since crude oils generally contain acidic polar compounds,
there is a tendency for silicate rocks to be neutral to water-
wet and carbonates to be neutral to oil-wet.
35
Mixed Wettability
36
Classification of Petroleum
Reservoirs Wettability
37
Factors affecting reservoir
wettability
1. Rock matrix
Mixed-Wet Oil •
•
•
Distribution of minerals
Pore shape or surface
curvature
Pore surface roughness
• Rock mineralogy
• Oil composition
• Brine composition
• Temperature
39
Factors Affecting Wettability
• Rock mineralogy
- Sandstone: Quartz, Silica: (SiO2)
- Limestone: Calcite (CaCO3)
- Dolomite: Calcite and Magnesium
[CaMg(CO3)2]
- Clays
- Anhydrite
- Other minerals
40
Factors Affecting Wettability
Oil composition
• Asphaltenes and resins may be present in crude oil.
• They are made up of relatively high molecular
weight, polar, polycyclic, aromatic ring compounds.
• Asphaltenes do not dissolve in crude oil but exist as
a colloidal suspension.
• Resins, on the other hand, are readily soluble in oil.
41
Factors Affecting Wettability
• Oil composition
– Silica (sandstone) and calcite (limestone) are
naturally water-wet.
– The adsorption of asphaltene particles on
the rock surface alter the wettability from
water-wet to oil-wet.
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Factors Affecting Wettability
• Brine composition
Potential determining ions like Ca2+ , Mg2+ and
SO42− have influence on the surface charge of the
carbonate rock and are thereby linked to its wetting
properties.
43
Factors Affecting Wettability
• Temperature
– The interfacial tension and force of adhesion is a
function of temperature.
44
Summary
46
Methods to Determine Wettability
• Contact Angle
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Methods to Determine Wettability
• Contact Angle
Factors that must be taken into account measuring contact
angles:
- Surface roughness
• Usually polished surfaces such as quartz and calcite
are used.
• These crystals may not be representative of grain
surfaces in porous media.
• It has also been observed that contact angle is
affected by the surface roughness which requires
extra care when using polished reservoir rocks.
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Methods to Determine Wettability
• Contact Angle
Effect of surface roughness on contact angle.
49
Methods to Determine Wettability
• Contact Angle
- History of which fluid first contacts the surface will affect
the measured value of the contact angle.
- Advancing contact angle: when water comes into
equilibrium with a surface previously in contact with oil.
- Receding contact angle: when oil comes into equilibrium
with a surface previously in contact with water.
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Methods to Determine Wettability
Advancing and Receding Contact Angles
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Methods to Determine Wettability
Contact Angle
- Time to reach equilibrium (when the contact
angle is independent of time) may vary from
seconds to days or years.
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Surface Wettability- Contact Angle Based Classification
Strongly Water-Wet 0 – 30
Water-Wet 30 – 60
Weakly Water-Wet 60 – 80
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.0c01335
Surface Wettability Measurement- Summary
• Amott
Amott wettability index is obtained by measuring the volumes of fluids
produced from a core sample during spontaneous imbibition and forced
displacement cycles.
• Saturate the core with oil at irreducible water (brine) saturation and age to
restore the wettability if needed.
• After aging, immerse the core in brine and measure the volume of oil
produced by spontaneous imbibition of brine (Vo1).
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Methods to Determine Wettability
• Centrifuge the core under brine and measure the additional volume of oil
displaced (Vo2). Forced displacement by injection of brine may be used instead
of a centrifuge. Also oil-wet membrane can be used to displace
• After centrifuging, immerse the core in oil and measure the volume of brine
produced by spontaneous imbibition of oil (Vw1).
• Centrifuge the core under oil and measure the additional volume of brine
displaced (Vw2). Forced displacement by injection of oil may be used instead of
a centrifuge. Also water-wet porous plate can be used to displace the brine.
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Methods to Determine Wettability
• Amott
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Methods to Determine Wettability
• Amott
The wettability indices are calculated as follows:
Wettability index of water
WIw = Vo1/(Vo1+Vo2)
Wettability index of oil
WIo = Vw1/(Vw1+Vw2)
The above two indices range from 0 to 1.
WIAmott-Harvey = WIw - WIo
WIAmot ranges between -1 to 1.
An index of -1 indicates strongly oil-wet system.
An index of +1 indicates strongly water-wet system.
An index close to zero indicates neutral or intermediate wettability.
58
Methods to Determine Wettability
• USBM (United States Bureau of Mines)
The USBM wettability index is obtained by obtaining two capillary pressure
curves using the centrifuge or porous plate and membranes.
• Saturate the core with oil at irreducible water (brine) saturation and age to
restore the wettability if needed.
62
Methods to Determine Wettability
• Obtain the capillary pressure curve by displacing brine by oil at several
capillary pressure values and measure the brine saturation from the volume
of brine produced.
• Calculate the area under the oil displacing brine cycle (A1) and under the
brine displacing oil cycle (A2).
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Methods to Determine Wettability
• USBM (United States Bureau of Mines)
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Water Wet System
Oil Wet System
Summary: Methods of Wettability Measurements
Contact Angle Amott USBM
Advantages Disadvantage Advantages Disadvantage Advantages Disadvantage
s & Concerns s & Concerns s & Concerns
Easy to understand Requires a smooth, Suitable for rock End points only; i.e., Suitable for rock Spontaneous
flat, and wettability systems reach the wettability imbibition is not
homogenous solid measurement same recovery are measurement considered, a
surface characterized as concerns for strongly
having the same wetted systems
wettability,
regardless how
fast/slow to reach
the end points
Easier to restore for Difficult to relate to More sensitive to Difficult to reach Good for weakly Average saturation is
repeat tests rock surface strongly wetted recovery plateau, wetted systems that usually used for the
wettability systems that especially for spontaneous calculation of the
spontaneous spontaneous imbibition is weak area under the Pc
imbibition dominate imbibition curve
Useful for Difficult to test at Measurement Fast Is a qualitative
systematical studies, reservoir conditions uncertainty of indicator, can not
such as oils, brines, (fluids, T, and P) produced fluids by used quantitatively
solids, aging, etc spontaneous
imbibition
Usable quantitatively Is a qualitative
indicator, can not
used quantitatively
Best practice: Combined Amott-USBM Method
Summary: Rock Wettability
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Methods to Determine Wettability
• Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
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Methods to Determine Wettability
Effect of pore wall mineralogy on contact angle
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Methods to Determine Wettability
Effect of pore wall mineralogy on contact angle
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Methods to Determine Wettability
• NMR
Changes in longitudinal relaxation time.
The distribution of grains at water/oil or air/water interfaces.
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NMR Wettability
• Freedman et al. presented how NMR T2 measurements could
evaluate wettability qualitatively.
• NMR measurements on oil/water saturated pore system have
sensitivity to wettability due to the enhancement of relaxation rate
(shorter T2 time) when wetting fluid contacts pore surfaces.
• The dominant relaxation mechanism for the wetting phase is the
surface relaxation while the non-wetting fluid is not significantly
influenced by surface relaxation since it does not coat or contact
pore surfaces
• In this case, the non-wetting fluid inside the pores shows bulk and
diffusion relaxations only, and consequently it tends to behave like
bulk fluid
81
NMR Wettability
• Looyestijn et al. introduced a quantitative wettability index
from NMR.
• When compared with USBM, the proposed NMR approach
could provide reasonable prediction in carbonates of relatively
low permeability (few mD) when using 20 cp oil viscosity.
• Nevertheless, the accuracy of the approach decreases with
increasing oil viscosity and increasing pore-sizes .
• Additionally, such approach requires a pore-size dependent
fluid saturation distribution, which can be challenging to obtain
in rocks with complex pore geometry
82
NMR Wettability
• Al-Mahrooqi et al. proposed a simple pore-scale model to
evaluate wettability based on T2 measurements.
• The model consists of a bundle of capillary tubes with a
triangular cross section, and it was used to investigate the
relationship between wettability and NMR relaxation times.
• Based on the experimental and modelling results, the authors
observed that T2 values at residual and irreducible saturation are
sensitive to the same amounts used to compute the Amott–
Harvey index.
• The model was tested against known wettability synthetic and
real sandstone samples characterized by various wettability
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NMR Wettability
84
NMR Wettability
85
NMR Wettability
T2 distributions of Berea Sandstone 100% brine saturated (Sw), after primary drainage (Swi)
and after forced imbibition (Sor) using oil 1(a) and oil 2 (b). The black and red dotted lines
reflect the modal T2 times for bulk phase brine and oil, respectively
86
NMR Wettability
T2 distributions of Indiana limestone 100% brine saturated (Sw), after primary drainage (Swi)
and after forced imbibition (Sor) using oil 1(a) and oil 2 (b). The black and red dotted lines
reflect the modal T2 times for bulk phase brine and oil, respectively
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NMR Wettability
88
NMR Wettability
89
NMR Wettability
Relying on the non-wetting fluid response
90
Dielectric Wettability
• In porous medium, 2 types of electrochemical
interactions:
1. Fluid-Fluid Interactions (between 2 immiscible fluids).
2. Fluid-Solid Interaction (between the rocks grains and the
fluids forming the Electrical Double Layer (EDL)).
(after Garcia and Heidari, 2018)
• EDL controls the wettability condition and can be
evaluated using zeta potential.
91
• Dielectric Polarization (Dielectric Theory)
5
•
Introduction
Dielectric Polarization
• The electrical field is applied with varying
frequency (time delay) which permits the
material under investigation to polarize and
reflect the stored energy.
• The reflected signal will have a reduction in the
amplitude and phase shift.
7
8
(after Garcia and Heidari, 2018)
35 200
BS-1 @ Sw=1 BS-1 @ Sw=1
Conductivity (S/m)
BS-2 @ Swirr1 BS-2 @ Swirr1
4 BS-1 @ Swirr2 0.20 BS-1 @ Swirr2
2 0.10
0 0.00
1.E+07 1.E+08 (Hz)
Frequency 1.E+09 1.E+07 1.E+08 (Hz)
Frequency 1.E+09
• The Relationship between the Dielectric and Wettability
Index
1
USBM and NMR Wettability
0.5
Indices
0
0 50 100 150 200
-0.5 USBM
y = 6.4813E-03x - 3.5537E-01
NMR R² = 0.8694
-1 The difference in Imaginary Permittivity
between Sw=1 and Swirr
5
2
Dielectric Wettability Index
1 1
BS-1
0.8
(Dimensionless)
0.4
(%) (%) Dimensionless Dimensionless Dimensionless Dimensionless IL-2 BS-2
0.2
18.82%
BS-1 23.06 151.630 7.553 144.077 0.73 y=x 0 FB-1
BS-2 25.74 7.82% 76.845 4.031 72.814 0.16 R² -1
= 0.9736 -0.5 FB-2
-0.2 0 0.5 1
FB-1 13.94 6.63% 70.708 1.823 68.885 0.16
FB-2 13.42 2.31% 32.734 2.121 30.613 -0.17 -0.4
IL-1 34.27 14.58% 163.458 4.969 158.489 0.63 -0.6
IL-2 30.35 11.92% 111.968 3.294 108.674 0.14
-0.8
-1 -1
USBM Wettability Index
(Dimensionless)
• The Relationship between the Dielectric and Wettability
Differences
0.8
• The imaginary permittivity and other
The Difference in
Berea
measurements relying on it (loss tangent and 0.6 Indiana
USBM
conductivity) were found to be the best 0.4 FB
y = 2.250E-03x + 2.431E-01
correlating with the wettability changes.
R² = 0.9619
0.2
The Difference in
1. The drop in the imaginary permittivity due to the Berea
0.6 Indiana
wettability alteration @ 10 MHz.
USBM
0.4 FB
2. The drop in the conductivity due to the
wettability alteration @ 10 MHz. y = 3.663x + 2.431E-01
0.2 R² = 0.9619
0
0 0.02difference
The 0.04 in Conductivity
0.06 0.08 … 0.1
4
9
Methods to Determine Wettability
• Relative Permeability Curves
• The end point krwe at Sor and the water saturation at the intersection
point of kro and krw curves.
• krwe at Sor less than 0.5 indicates water-wet and greater than 0.5
indicates oil-wet.
• Water saturation at the intersection point greater than 0.5 indicates
water-wet and value less than 0.5 indicated oil-wet.
102
Methods to Determine Wettability
•Relative Permeability Data
103
Hydrogen Wettability
104
Hydrogen Wettability
105
Hydrogen Wettability
106
Hydrogen Wettability
107
Hydrogen Wettability
108
Hydrogen Wettability
109
Hydrogen Wettability
110
Hydrogen Wettability
111
Hydrogen Wettability
112
Hydrogen Wettability
113
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions on
Wettability and Recovery
114
Wettability Alteration
• Chemicals
115
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions on
Wettability and Recovery
• The Double Layer refers to two parallel layers of
charge surrounding the object. The first layer, either
positive or negative, comprises ions adsorbed onto the
object due to chemical interactions.
• The second layer is loosely associated with the object.
It is made of free ions that move in the fluid under the
influence of electrical attraction or thermal motion
rather than being firmly anchored. It is thus called the
"diffuse layer".
116
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions on
Wettability and Recovery
117
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions on
Wettability and Recovery
118
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions on
Wettability and Recovery
121
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions on
Wettability and Recovery
122
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions on
Wettability and Recovery
• If the surface is in contact with water, hydronium ions are attached to the
negative charges and the hydroxyl ion to the positive metallic ions
producing a water-wet surface.
• The van der Waals and electrostatic forces are both negative, therefore the
approach of a basic polar compound to the surface is increasingly
attractive without an energy barrier to overcome for a reaction to take
place.
127
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions on
Wettability and Recovery
• The Lewis acid/base interactions, which are pH dependent, are the
principle reactions occurring between a water film and the oil-water- rock
interfaces.
• As long as a water film remains between the oil and rock, the rock surface
will remain water-wet, but if the film collapses (because of diffusion of
polar compounds from the oil-water interface through the water film to the
rock surface, or the influence of DLVO forces) polar compounds can
adhere to the rock by physical adsorption and/or coulombic reactions
leading to a change of wettability from water-wet to oil-wet.
• The presence of multivalent cations in the water film can promote oil-
wetting by partial reaction with polar compounds at the oil-water interface.
• This reaction and diffusion is time dependent and thus responsible for the
gradual rate of attaining a stable wetting condition after a rock sample is
saturated with water and oil (aging time). 128
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions
on Wettability and Recovery
129
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions
on Wettability and Recovery
From130
Oilfield Review
Effect of Rock/Fluid Interactions
on Wettability and Recovery
131
Donaldson and Alam, 2008
Effect of Wettability on Relative Permeability
133
Effect of Wettability on Residual Oil Saturation
134
IMPLICATIONS OF WETTABILITY
Wettability Alteration
• Chemicals
- Surfactants
- Caustics
- Nanoparticles
• Adjust brine composition and
salinity
• CO2
136
Effect of Wettability Alteration by Nanoparticles