Darcy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For 19th-century French scientist, see Henry Darcy.
- This article is about unit of fluid permeability. For other uses, see Darcy (disambiguation).
A darcy is a unit of permeability, named after Henry Darcy. It is not an SI unit, but it is widely used in petroleum engineering and geology. Like other measures of permeability, a darcy has the same units as area.
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[edit] Definition
Permeability measures the ability of fluids to flow through rock (or other porous media). The darcy is defined using Darcy's Law which can be written as:
where:
- v is the superficial (or bulk) fluid flow rate through the medium
- κ is the permeability of a medium
- μ is the dynamic viscosity of the fluid
- ΔP is the applied pressure difference
- Δx is the thickness of the medium
The darcy is referenced to a mixture of unit systems. A medium with a permeability of 1 darcy permits a flow of 1 cm/s of a fluid with viscosity 1 cP (1 mPa·s) under a pressure gradient of 1 atm/cm .
[edit] Origin
The darcy is named after Henry Darcy. Rock permeability is usually expressed in millidarcies (mD)—1 mD is equal to 0.001 darcy—because rocks found in oil and water reservoirs typically have permeabilities in the range of 5 to 500 mD.
The odd combination of units comes from Darcy's original studies of water flow through columns of sand. Water has a viscosity of 1.0019 cP at about room temperature.
[edit] Conversions
Converted to SI units, 1 darcy is equivalent to 9.86923×10−13 m² or 0.986923 µm². This conversion is usually approximated as 1 µm². Note that this is the reciprocal of 1.01325—the conversion factor from atmospheres to bars.
[edit] References
- Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) metric standard in PDF
- Richard Selley's "Elements of Petroleum Geology (2nd edition)," page 250