GAS LIFT IN BASS STRAIT

1985 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 107
Author(s):  
Kathryn J. Fagg

Gas lift has proved a most effective artificial lift method for the fields operated by Esso Australia Ltd in Bass Strait for the Esso-BHP joint venture. Gas lift is now used to produce approximately 5 st ML/d of the total crude production from the Strait. It has enabled wells to be produced to water cuts higher than 90 per cent, increasing the oil recovery from the fields by up to 35 per cent.Gas lift work in Bass Strait to date has included the use of special packoff gas lift assemblies for wells with sliding sleeves, the development of a tool to assist the opening of the sleeves, improved operating techniques to limit slugging from gas-lifted wells, and the testing of gas lift performance. Gas lifting has been more successful than expected, and as a result, workovers initially planned to install full gas lift strings for older wells have not been necessary. The two phase flow correlations available have been improved to match the performance of the gas-lifted wells. The correlations are now used to design tubing strings with a number of gas lift mandrels prior to running the initial completions and to select the optimum gas injection depth.Future work in gas lift for Bass Strait will involve the optimisation and automation of lift gas distribution on the platforms. Gas lift will also be used for planned future developments, including mini-platforms and subsea completions.

2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 32
Author(s):  
Mia Ferian Helmy

Gas lift is one of the artificial lift method that has mechanism to decrease the flowing pressure gradient in the pipe or relieving the fluid column inside the tubing by injecting amount of gas into the annulus between casing and tubing. The volume of  injected gas was inversely proportional to decreasing of  flowing  pressure gradient, the more volume of gas injected the smaller the pressure gradient. Increasing flowrate is expected by decreasing pressure gradient, but it does not always obtained when the well is in optimum condition. The increasing of flow rate will not occured even though the volume of injected gas is abundant. Therefore, the precisely design of gas lift included amount of cycle, gas injection volume and oil recovery estimation is needed. At the begining well AB-1 using artificial lift method that was continuos gas lift with PI value assumption about 0.5 STB/D/psi. Along with decreasing of production flow rate dan availability of the gas injection in brownfield, so this well must be analyze to determined the appropriate production method under current well condition. There are two types of gas lift method, continuous and intermittent gas lift. Each type of gas lift has different optimal condition to increase the production rate. The optimum conditions of continuous gaslift are high productivity 0.5 STB/D/psi and minimum production rate 100 BFPD. Otherwise, the intermittent gas lift has limitations PI and production rate which is lower than continuous gas lift.The results of the analysis are Well AB-1 has production rate gain amount 20.75 BFPD from 23 BFPD became 43.75 BFPD with injected gas volume 200 MSCFPD and total cycle 13 cycle/day. This intermittent gas lift design affected gas injection volume efficiency amount 32%.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Renato P. Coutinho ◽  
Paulo J. Waltrich ◽  
Wesley C. Williams ◽  
Parviz Mehdizadeh ◽  
Stuart Scott ◽  
...  

Abstract Liquid-assisted gas-lift (LAGL) is a recently developed concept to unload wells using a gas–liquid fluid mixture. The success deployment of the LAGL technology is related to the behavior of two-phase flow through gas-lift valves. For this reason, this work presents an experimental and numerical study on two-phase flow through orifice gas-lift valves used in liquid-assisted gas-lift unloading. To the knowledge of the authors, there is no investigation in the literature on experimental characterization of two-phase flow through gas-lift valves. Experimental data are presented for methane-water flow through gas-lift valves with different orifice port sizes: 12.7 and 17.5 mm. The experiments were performed for pressures ranging from 1.00 to 9.00 MPa, gas flow rates from 0 to 4.71 m3/h, and water flow rate from 0 to 0.68 m3/min. The experimental results are compared to numerical models published in the literature for two-phase flow through restrictions and to commercial multiphase flow simulators. It is observed that some models developed for two-phase flow through restrictions could successfully characterize two-phase flow thorough gas-lift valves with errors lower than 10%. However, it is first necessary to experimentally determine the discharge coefficient (CD) for each gas-lift valve. The commercial flow simulators showed a similar performance as the models available in the literature.


Author(s):  
Yuqing Xue ◽  
Huixiong Li ◽  
Tianyou Sheng ◽  
Changjiang Liao

A large amount of air need be transported into the reservoir in the deep stratum to supply oxygen to some microbes in Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery (MEOR). Air-water two-phase flows downward along vertical pipeline during the air transportation. Base on the experiment data described in this paper, the characteristics of air-water two phase flow patterns were investigated. The flow pattern map of air-water two phase flows in the pipe with inner diameter of 65 mm was drawn, criterions of flow pattern transition were discussed, and the dynamic signals of the pressure and the differential pressure of the two phase flow were recorded to characterize the three basic flow regimes indirectly. The frictional pressure drop of downward flow in vertical pipe must not be disregarded contrast with upward two phase flow in the vertical pipe because the buoyancy must be overcame when the gas flows downward along pipe, and there would be a maximum value of frictional when the flow pattern translated from slug flow to churn flow.


Open Physics ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haojun Xie ◽  
Aifen Li ◽  
Zhaoqin Huang ◽  
Bo Gao ◽  
Ruigang Peng

AbstractCaves in fractured-vuggy reservoir usually contain lots of filling medium, so the two-phase flow in formations is the coupling of free flow and porous flow, and that usually leads to low oil recovery. Considering geological interpretation results, the physical filled cave models with different filling mediums are designed. Through physical experiment, the displacement mechanism between un-filled areas and the filling medium was studied. Based on the experiment model, we built a mathematical model of laminar two-phase coupling flow considering wettability of the porous media. The free fluid region was modeled using the Navier-Stokes and Cahn-Hilliard equations, and the two-phase flow in porous media used Darcy's theory. Extended BJS conditions were also applied at the coupling interface. The numerical simulation matched the experiment very well, so this numerical model can be used for two-phase flow in fracture-vuggy reservoir. In the simulations, fluid flow between inlet and outlet is free flow, so the pressure difference was relatively low compared with capillary pressure. In the process of water injection, the capillary resistance on the surface of oil-wet filling medium may hinder the oil-water gravity differentiation, leading to no fluid exchange on coupling interface and remaining oil in the filling medium. But for the water-wet filling medium, capillary force on the surface will coordinate with gravity. So it will lead to water imbibition and fluid exchange on the interface, high oil recovery will finally be reached at last.


2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arash Kadivar ◽  
Ebrahim Nemati Lay

Abstract Continuous gas-lift in a typical oil well was simulated using computational fluid dynamic (CFD) technique. A multi fluid model based on the momentum transfer between liquid and gas bubbles was employed to simulate two-phase flow in a vertical pipe. The accuracy of the model was investigated through comparison of numerical predictions with experimental data. The model then was used to study the dynamic behaviour of the two-phase flow around injection point in details. The predictions by the model were compared with other empirical correlations, as well. To obtain an optimum condition of gas-lift, the influence of the effective parameters including the quantity of injected gas, tubing diameter and bubble size distribution were investigated. The results revealed that increasing tubing diameter, the injected gas rate and decreasing bubble diameter improve gas-lift performance.


2012 ◽  
Vol 326-328 ◽  
pp. 181-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Alves Batista ◽  
B. Gonçalves Coutinho ◽  
Severino Rodrigues de Farias Neto ◽  
Antônio Gilson Barbosa de Lima

The aim of this work is to study theoretically the effect of porosity of an oil reservoir with arbitrary geometry on the oil recovery factor. A two-dimensional mathematical modeling (Black-oil model) and numerical solution applied to two-phase flow (water-oil) into the reservoir with irregular geometry including water injection is presented. The conservation equations written in generalized coordinates are solved using the finite volume method, with a fully implicit technique. Results of the pressure and saturation distributions and oil recovery factor over time are presented and evaluated for different values of porosity of the reservoir.


1972 ◽  
Vol 12 (02) ◽  
pp. 171-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Van-Quy ◽  
P. Simandoux ◽  
J. Corteville

Abstract This paper describes a general multicomponent two-phase flow model, taking into account convection, diffusion and thermodynamic exchange between phases. The main assumptions are: isothermal one-dimensional flow; two-phase flow (gas and liquid); each phase may be represented by a mixture of three components or groups of components. Actually, a great many recovery problems cannot be pictured by usual models because the oil and, in many cases, the injected fluid are not simple fluids and may bring about exchanges of components that considerably modify their characteristics. This is why efforts are now being made to develop "compositional" or "multicomponent" models capable of solving such situations. Generalization of the model to more complex systems can be considered. Cases treated may be any type of single- and two-phase flow, in particular any miscible process (e. g., high-pressure gas drive, condensing gas drive, slug displacement) and any diphasic processes with high mass exchange (e.g., displacement by carbon dioxide or flue gas). This model is working and has been successfully checked by experiments. Introduction Many investigations, broth experimental and theoretical, have been made on the recovery of oil from reservoirs. With regard to mathematical models, most of those conceived up to now have dealt with oil recovery by the injection of a fluid that is miscible or immiscible with the oil. For miscible drives, single-phase flow with a binary mixture and miscibility in all proportions is involved. In such an ideal situation oil recovery is theoretically total. For immiscible displacements flow is diphasic. Capillary pressure and relative permeability play a preponderant role. Since irreducible oil saturation preponderant role. Since irreducible oil saturation is inevitable, oil recovery can never be total. Actually, a great many recovery problems cannot be pictured by such models because the oil and, in many cases, the injected fluid are not simple fluids and may bring about exchanges of components that considerably modify their characteristics. This is why efforts are now being made to develop "compositional" or "multicomponent" models capable of solving such situations. Such a model is described here. It is designed to handle the most general case of the displacement of one fluid by another. This model offers the following possibilities.The fluids may be made up of more than two components.Flow may be entirely monophasic, entirely diphasic, or partially monophasic and diphasic.Miscibility may be partial or total.The material exchange between phases may take place under specific thermodynamic conditions. A model that is much closer to reality should provide more thorough knowledge of mass transfer provide more thorough knowledge of mass transfer mechanisms in a complex mixture as well as better oil recovery forecasting with the injection of a second fluid. DESCRIPTION OF THE MODEL In a porous formation, we will consider the displacement of a liquid hydrocarbon complex in place by another fluid that is injected into the place by another fluid that is injected into the formation. The injected fluid may be a gas or a liquid, containing or not containing hydrocarbons. We assume that the mass transfer in the transition zone between the displacing fluid and the displaced fluid occurs according to three mechanism: convection, diffusion and thermodynamic exchange between phases. We propose to study the flow thus described. The main assumptions are:flow is isothermal and one-dimensional;the porous medium is homogeneous and isotropic;there is no effect of gravity;there is a two-phase flow, i.e., oil and gaseach phase may be represented by a mixture of three components or three groups of components (e.g., C1, C2-6, C7+); SPEJ P. 171


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document