Characteristics of Spontaneous Imbibition and Penetration Depth in Tight Conglomerate Reservoirs
Zeyou Hui, Jiaxing Liu, Zixiang Wang, Meng Ning, Kai Li, Qiang Luo, Shixun BaiDuring hydraulic fracturing, the extensive use of slickwater and post-fracturing shut-in (soaking) processes take advantage of spontaneous imbibition to displace crude oil. While nano-flooding agents are known to reduce interfacial tension (IFT) and alter wettability, a critical challenge lies in distinguishing between deep but inefficient displacement and shallow but highly efficient sweep. This study investigates the pore-scale mobilization and penetration depth of a nano-flooding agent in tight conglomerate reservoirs and focuses on the recovery per unit imbibition depth as a novel metric for evaluating the displacement efficiency. The nano-agent demonstrated excellent performance, reducing oil–water IFT to 0.141 mN/m and reversing wettability from oil-wet (148.7°) to water-wet (39.5°). Experiments revealed that the diffusion rate of the nano-agent decreases with pore size, suggesting a limited transport in confined space. Under reservoir conditions (80 °C), spontaneous imbibition in tight cores was highly permeability-dependent. High-permeability cores achieved a recovery rate of up to 44.6%, whereas low-permeability cores reached only about 12%. This work highlights that penetration depth alone does not necessarily indicate high recovery. The medium-permeability core exhibited a lower final penetration depth than the low-permeability core but achieved a much higher total recovery due to superior efficiency per unit depth, suggesting that in tight reservoirs, a shallow but highly efficient displacement mechanism can outperform a deep but inefficient one.