The original water in the coal rock pores plays a controlling role in the occurrence of gas. Furthermore, during the hydraulic fracturing process, pressurized fracturing fluid with a higher pressure than the original pore pressure in the fractures drives the fracturing fluid to infiltrate into the coal rock pores, thereby altering the occurrence pattern of gas and water in the original pores. However, due to the limitations of the indoor simulation device, a systematic conclusion on the impact of the original pore water and imbibition fracturing fluid on coalbed methane reservoirs has not yet been formed. In this paper, an integrated device combining displacement and low-field nuclear magnetic resonance was employed using underground cylindrical coal rock samples as experimental subjects. Experimental conditions were maintained at a temperature of 30 °C, a confining pressure of 23 MPa, and an approximate reservoir pressure of 15 MPa. The initial water saturation levels were altered to 0, 27.88, and 42.18% to replicate the conditions of a coalbed methane reservoir at a depth of approximately 1200 m. Fracturing fluid with a pressure of 18 MPa was injected into the experimental samples to simulate the impact of the fracturing fluid on the original reservoir during hydraulic fracturing. This allowed for a realistic assessment of the influence of initial water saturation and fracturing fluid absorption on the coalbed methane recovery rate in the reservoir. The experimental results indicate that the imbibition process promotes the desorption of adsorbed gas, and the desorption amount of adsorbed gas increases with the increase in the original water saturation. This will result in an increase in the gas pressure within the pore system. The conditions of this experiment, in comparison to the previous ones, more closely resemble real reservoir conditions. This enables a realistic assessment of how the presence of the original water content and the absorption of the fracturing fluid affect gas occurrence within the reservoir.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.3c03351DOI Listing

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