OFR-22-74 Development Of Techniques And The Measurement Of Relative Permeability And Capillary Pressure Relationship In Coal

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 85
- File Size:
- 23262 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1974
Abstract
Gas and water permeabilities of a large number of samples from the Pittsburgh and Pocahontas coals were measured at various overburden and mean flow pressures. A wide variation in the air and water permeabilities was obtained for each type of coal. Overburden pressure has the most significant effect on the single-phase permeability. Considerable hysteretic effect was observed for both air and water permeabilities. Gas permeabilities are affected to a lesser degree by mean flow pressures above atmospheric. However, at subatmospheric mean pressures, appreciable increase in permeability occurs for low permeability samples. Air and water relative permeabilities were also measured for numerous samples of Pittsburgh and Pocahontas coals. Tests were performed under steady-state conditions for both drainage and imbibition cycles. Results indicate that the flow of gas is greatly reduced during the latter process, whereas it is largely undiminished over a wide water-saturation range during drainage. It is also shown that imbibition saturation distributions obtained from liquid-water imbibition as opposed to water-vapor adsorption produce gas permeability curves of radically different character. The effective permeabilities to both gas and water were significantly reduced with the application of overburden pressures in the range of 0 to 1,000 psig, but the general shapes of the relative permeability curves remained the same.
Citation
APA:
(1974) OFR-22-74 Development Of Techniques And The Measurement Of Relative Permeability And Capillary Pressure Relationship In CoalMLA: OFR-22-74 Development Of Techniques And The Measurement Of Relative Permeability And Capillary Pressure Relationship In Coal. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1974.