Influence of Wettability on Interfacial Areas and Relative Permeabilities in Porous Media

International Wettability Symposia
Abstract

Using an interfacial tracer technique, our experiments show qualitatively different trends of total interfacial area between the wetting and non-wetting phases as a function of saturation, depending on whether the system is strongly or weakly wetted. A strongly wetted system is defined as one in which the wetting phase can spread as a thin film on the solid surface. We assess the relative contributions of fluid/fluid and fluid/solid interfaces to the total area using thermodynamic arguments. The fluid/solid contribution to area plays a crucial role in explaining the measurements.

The influence of interfacial area on relative permeability is not straightforward. Simple analysis based upon pore-level distribution of phases in a model porous medium allows quantifying the differences in the relative permeabilities for both weakly and strongly wetted systems, measured simultaneously with the interfacial area. Relative permeability correlates with fluid/solid area but not with fluid/fluid interfacial area.

Reference type
Conference Paper