Scale‐up of pore‐level relative permeability from micro‐ to macro‐scale

2020 ◽  
Vol 98 (9) ◽  
pp. 2032-2051
Author(s):  
Farzad Bashtani ◽  
Apostolos Kantzas
2018 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 417-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason M. Kamilar ◽  
Lydia Beaudrot

Environmental stress on primate populations can take many forms. Abiotic factors, such as temperature and precipitation, may directly influence the behavior of primates owing to physiological demands of thermoregulation or through indirect influences on vegetation that primates rely on for food. These effects can also scale up to the macro scale, impacting primate distributions and evolution. Primates also encounter stress during interactions within and between species (i.e., biotic interactions). For example, selective pressure from male-perpetrated infanticide can drive the development of female counterstrategies and can impact life-history traits. Predation on primates can modify group size, ranging behavior, and habitat use. Finally, humans have influenced primate populations for millennia. More recently, hunting, habitat disturbance, disease, and climate change have increased in frequency and severity with detrimental impacts on primate populations worldwide. These effects and recent evidence from camera traps emphasize the importance of maintaining protected areas for conserving primate populations.


1995 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naji Saad ◽  
A.S. Cullick ◽  
M.M. Honarpour

SPE Journal ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Farzad Bashtani ◽  
Mazda Irani ◽  
Apostolos Kantzas

Summary Improvements to more advanced tools, such as inflow control devices (ICDs), create a high drawdown regime close to wellbores. Gas liberation within the formation occurs when the drawdown pressure is reduced below the bubblepoint pressure, which in turn reduces oil mobility by reducing its relative permeability, and potentially reducing oil flow. The key input in any reservoir modeling to compare the competition between gas and liquid flow toward ICDs is the relative permeability of different phases. Pore-network modeling (PNM) has been used to compute the relative permeability curves of oil, gas, and water based on the pore structure of the formation. In this paper, we explain the variability of pore structure on its relative permeability, and for a similar formation and identical permeability, we explain how other factors, such as connectivity and throat radius distribution, can vary the characteristic curves. By using a boundary element method, we also incorporate the expected relative permeability and capillary pressure curves into the modeling. The results show that such variability in the pore network has a less than 10% impact on production gas rates, but its effect on oil production can be significant. Another important finding of such modeling is that providing the PNM-created relative permeabilities may provide totally different direction on setting the operational constraints. For example, in the case studied in this paper, PNM-created relative permeability curves suggest that a reduction of flowing bottomhole pressure (FBHP) increases the oil rate, but for the case modeled with a Corey correlation, changes in FBHP will not create any uplift. The results of such work show the importance of PNM in well completion design and probabilistic analysis of the performance, and can be extended based on different factors of the reservoir in future research. Although PNM has been widely used to study the multiphase flow in porous media in academia, the application of such modeling in reservoir and production engineering is quite narrow. In this study, we develop a framework that shows the general user the importance of PNM simulation and its implementation in day-to-day modeling. With this approach, the PNM can be used not just to provide relative permeability or capillary pressure curves on a core or pore- scale, but to preform simulations at the wellbore or reservoir scale as well to optimize the current completions.


Author(s):  
Liviu Popa-Simil

Present High Performance Scientific Computing (HPSC) systems are facing strong limitations when full integration from nano-materials to operational system is desired. The HPSC have to be upgraded from the actual designed exa-scale machines probably available after 2015 to even higher computer power and storage capability to yotta-scale in order to simulate systems from nano-scale up to macro scale as a way to greatly improve the safety and performances of the future advanced nuclear power structures. The road from the actual peta-scale systems to yotta-scale computers, which would barely be sufficient for current calculation needs, is difficult and requires new revolutionary ideas in HPSC, and probably the large-scale use of Quantum Supercomputers (QSC) that are now in the development stage.


1995 ◽  
Vol 47 (11) ◽  
pp. 980-986 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.M. Honarpour ◽  
A.S. Cullick ◽  
Naji Saad ◽  
N.V. Humphreys

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura J. Pyrak-Nolte ◽  
JiangTao Cheng ◽  
Ping Yu ◽  
Nicholas Giordano ◽  
Mirela Mustata ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 11 (03) ◽  
pp. 149-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Li ◽  
A.S. Cullick ◽  
L.W. Lake

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