Glass beads have been surface treated with Dri-film to render them oil wet by n-octane to varying degrees, and capiUary de saturation curves have been determined by the restored state method. The desaturation curves show a regularity of increasing displacement pressures as the oil wetness increases. This has been used to compute apparent contact angles between n-octane and water on glass. The family of desaturation curves also shows a regular crossover, such that the residual wetting liquid saturation values are in reverse order to the displacement pressures. A semi-logarithmic variation is shown between the apparent contact angle and the residual saturation. The desaturation data are interpreted to mean that the wetting liquid ceases to be a continuous phase within individual pores before the capillary pressure can be raised sufficiently to force out the wetting phase completely. The saturation of wetting liquid at which this break in liquid continuity occurs is higher as the oil wetness decreases.
CITATION STYLE
Bethel, F. T., & Calhoun, J. C. (1953). Capillary Desaturation in Unconsolidated Beads. Journal of Petroleum Technology, 5(08), 197–202. https://doi.org/10.2118/953197-g
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