A measure of ability of a porous formation to allow a certain fluid to pass through it.
For the laminar flow:
(1) | k = \mu \cdot \frac{| {\bf v}|}{ | \nabla p |} |
where
\mu | fluid viscosity |
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| {\bf v}| | fluid velocity |
\nabla p | pressure gradient |
Permeability depends on fluid type, filling the porous media and the fluid type which is sweeping through it which leads to splitting its value into a product of two components:
(2) | k = k_a \cdot k_r |
where
k_a | absolute permeability to air which is defined by the reservoir pore structure only, also denoted as k_{abs} or k_{air} |
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k_r | relative permeability to a given fluid which is defined by the interaction between fluid and reservoir matrix |
In general case, permeability is anisotropic both in vertical and lateral directions and quantified by symmetric tensor value:
(3) | k=\begin{bmatrix} k_{11} & k_{12} & k_{13} \\ k_{12} & k_{22} & k_{23} \\ k_{13} & k_{23} & k_{33} \end{bmatrix} |
which can be diagonalized for a proper selection of coordinate axis ({\bf e_1}, {\bf e_2}, {\bf e_3}) \rightarrow ({\bf e_x}, {\bf e_y}, {\bf e_z}) :
(4) | k=\begin{bmatrix} k_x & 0 & 0 \\ 0 & k_y & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & k_z \end{bmatrix} |
and characterized by 3 principal tensor components k = (k_x, \, k_y, \ k_z)
If not mentioned otherwise the permeability usually means absolute horizontal permeability: k = k_h = \sqrt{k_x^2+k_y^2}.
See also
Natural Science / Physics / Fluid Dynamics / Percolation
Petroleum Industry / Upstream / Subsurface E&P Disciplines / Field Study & Modelling
[ Petrophysics ] [ Basic reservoir properties ] [ Wettability ] [ Permeability ] [ Absolute permeability ] [ Horizontal permeability ] [ Vertical permeability ] [ kv/kh ]