Amott test

The Amott test is one of the most widely used empirical wettability measurements for reservoir cores in petroleum engineering. The method combines two spontaneous imbibition measurements and two forced displacement measurements. This test defines two different indices: the Amott water index (I_w) and the Amott oil index (I_o).

Amott–Harvey index

The two Amott indices are often combined to give the Amott–Harvey index. It is a number between -1 and 1 describing wettability of a rock in drainage processes. It is defined as:

AI=I_w-I_o
Figure 1: Amott–Harvey index and USBM number calculation.

These two indices are obtained from special core analysis (SCAL) experiments (porous plate or centrifuge) by plotting the capillary pressure curve as a function of the water saturation as shown on figure 1:

I_w=\frac{S_{spw}-S_{cw}}{S_{or}-S_{cw}}

with S_{spw} is the water saturation for a zero capillary pressure during the imbibition process, S_{cw} is the irreducible water saturation and S_{or} is the residual oil saturation after imbibition.

I_o=\frac{S_{or}-S_{spo}}{S_{or}-S_{cw}}

with S_{spo} is the oil saturation for a zero capillary pressure during the secondary drainage process, S_{cw} is the irreducible water saturation and S_{or} is the residual non-wetting phase saturation after imbibition.

A rock is defined as:

See also

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 02, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.