scholarly journals Thermal Hydraulic Analysis Using GIS on Application of HTR to Thermal Recovery of Heavy Oil Reservoirs

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Yangping Zhou ◽  
Fu Li ◽  
Zhiwei Zhou ◽  
Yuanle Ma

At present, large water demand and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions have emerged as challenges of steam injection for oil thermal recovery. This paper proposed a strategy of superheated steam injection by the high-temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTR) for thermal recovery of heavy oil, which has less demand of water and emission of CO2. The paper outlines the problems of conventional steam injection and addresses the advantages of superheated steam injection by HTR from the aspects of technology, economy, and environment. A Geographic Information System (GIS) embedded with a thermal hydraulic analysis function is designed and developed to analyze the strategy, which can make the analysis work more practical and credible. Thermal hydraulic analysis using this GIS is carried out by applying this strategy to a reference heavy oil field. Two kinds of injection are considered and compared: wet steam injection by conventional boilers and superheated steam injection by HTR. The heat loss, pressure drop, and possible phase transformation are calculated and analyzed when the steam flows through the pipeline and well tube and is finally injected into the oil reservoir. The result shows that the superheated steam injection from HTR is applicable and promising for thermal recovery of heavy oil reservoirs.

Author(s):  
Jie Fan ◽  
Zuqing He ◽  
Wei Pang ◽  
Daoming Fu ◽  
Hanxiu Peng ◽  
...  

AbstractMulti-gas assisted steam huff and puff process is a relatively new thermal recovery technology for offshore heavy oil reservoirs. Some blocks of Bohai oilfield have implemented multi-gas assisted steam huff and puff process. However, the development mechanism still requires further study. In this paper, high-temperature high-pressure (HTHP) PVT experiments and different huff and puff experiments of sand pack were carried out to reveal the enhanced production mechanism and evaluate the development effect of multi-gas assisted steam huff and puff process. The results indicated that viscosity reduction and thermal expansion still were the main development mechanism of multi-gas assisted steam huff and puff process. Specifically, CO2 easily dissolved in the heavy oil that made it mainly play the role of reducing oil viscosity, N2 was characteristics of small solubility and good expansibility, and it could improve formation pressure, increase steam sweep volume and even reduce the heat loss. Meanwhile, injecting multi-gas and steam could break the balance of heavy oil component that made the content of resin reduce and the content of saturates, aromatics and asphaltene increase so as to further reduce the viscosity of heavy oil. Compared with steam huff and puff process, multi-gas assisted steam huff and puff process increased the recovery by 2–5%. The optimal water–gas ratio and steam injection temperature were 4:6 and 300℃, respectively. The results suggested that multi-gas assisted steam huff and puff process would have wide application prospect for offshore heavy oil reservoirs.


2012 ◽  
Vol 550-553 ◽  
pp. 2848-2852
Author(s):  
Xiao Hu Dong ◽  
Hui Qing Liu ◽  
Zhan Xi Pang ◽  
Yong Gang Yi

With the development of heavy oil reservoirs, it faced a series of problems. Using the theory of thermal-hydrological-mechanical (THM) coupling, a predictive model of reservoir physical properties (RPP) after thermal recovery is established. Based on this model, the changing process of reservoir physical properties is simulated by the method of numerical simulation. The obtained results show that the sand production has a significant influence on RPP. By contrast with rock deformation, it has a smaller influence on RPP. The influence caused by the former is about 5~8 times than latter. During the period of steam injection, resulting from the movement of sand grain and expansion of reservoir, both porosity and permeability of reservoir are on the rise. Due to the sand production and reservoir compression, a reducing tendency is happened in the production period. The changes of RPP in reservoir are huge along the main streamline direction, and it might change because of the presence of high-permeability path.


Author(s):  
Congge He ◽  
Anzhu Xu ◽  
Zifei Fan ◽  
Lun Zhao ◽  
Angang Zhang ◽  
...  

Accurate calculation of heat efficiency in the process of superheated steam injection is important for the efficient development of heavy oil reservoirs. In this paper, an integrated analytical model for wellbore heat efficiency, reservoir heat efficiency and total heat efficiency was proposed based on energy conservation principle. Comparisons have been made between the new model results, measured data and Computer Modelling Group (CMG) results for a specific heavy oil reservoir developed by superheated steam injection, and similarity is observed, which verifies the correctness of the new model. After the new model is validated, the effect of injection rate and reservoir thickness on wellbore heat efficiency and reservoir heat efficiency are analyzed. The results show that the wellbore heat efficiency increases with injection time. The larger the injection rate is, the higher the wellbore heat efficiency. However, the reservoir heat efficiency decreases with injection time and the injection rate has little impact on it. The reservoir thickness has no effect on wellbore heat efficiency, but the reservoir heat efficiency and total heat efficiency increase with the reservoir thickness rising.


2011 ◽  
Vol 239-242 ◽  
pp. 3069-3073 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiang Zheng ◽  
Hui Qing Liu ◽  
Zhan Xi Pang ◽  
Fang Li

By using the technology of numerical reservoir simulation, we have compared superheated steam soak with saturated steam soak in area of heating, effect of distillation, capability of increasing oil production, volume of steam in need to evaluate the effect of superheated steam soak in heavy oil reservoirs. Analyzed the sensitivity of parameters like steam injection intensity, steam injection rate, soak time, degree of superheat to conclude the rule that they affect on recovery percentage. The research shows that, heating radius of superheated steam is greater than that of saturated steam, distillation effect of superheated steam is better than that of saturated steam, oil production of superheated steam is more than that of saturated steam, steam volume in need of superheated steam is less than that of saturated steam. Recovery percentage of superheated steam soak increases but more and more slowly with the increase in steam injection intensity, increases first and then decreases with the increase in steam injection rate, increases first and then decreases with the increase in soak time, increases but more and more slowly with the increase in degree of superheat. Influence of steam injection intensity is obvious to recovery percentage, but influence of other factors like soak time, steam injection rate, degree of superheat is insignificant.


2014 ◽  
Vol 694 ◽  
pp. 350-353
Author(s):  
Zhen Yu Sun ◽  
Ji Cheng Zhao

Liaohe oilfield is the biggest production base of the heavy oil in China. There are more than 800 horizontal wells with thermal recovery in the heavy oil reservoirs. Most of them adopt screen to complete the wells without packer outside of the casing, which results in packing off annulus space between screen and layer and only commingled steam or step steam can be injected inside the screen. Because of the areal and vertical anisotropy of the reservoirs, the horizontal sections are exploited unequally. According to the statistics, the horizontal wells with nonuniform exploitation accounts for 80 percent of all the horizontal wells with thermal recovery, and only 1/3 to 1/2 of the horizontal sections are comparatively well produced. The oil well productivity is seriously affected. So based on step steam injection inside the screen, we have developed the segregated completion and segregated steam injection technology applied to the horizontal wells with thermal recovery in heavy oil reservoirs. By means of the research on the segregated completion technology and development of high temperature ECP and casing thermal centralizer, which formed the corresponding technology applied in the horizontal wells with thermal recovery. Till now this technology has been applied in 8 wells, and average cyclic steam/oil ratio increased 0.1 plus, and the uniform development level of the horizontal section has been improved and the oilfield’s development effect has been advanced obviously.


Fuel ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 233 ◽  
pp. 166-176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhanxi Pang ◽  
Xiaocong Lyu ◽  
Fengyi Zhang ◽  
Tingting Wu ◽  
Zhennan Gao ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 138 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Changjiu Wang ◽  
Huiqing Liu ◽  
Qiang Zheng ◽  
Yongge Liu ◽  
Xiaohu Dong ◽  
...  

Controlling the phenomenon of steam channeling is a major challenge in enhancing oil recovery of heavy oil reservoirs developed by steam injection, and the profile control with gel is an effective method to solve this problem. The use of conventional gel in water flooding reservoirs also has poor heat stability, so this paper proposes a new high-temperature gel (HTG) plugging agent on the basis of a laboratory experimental investigation. The HTG is prepared with nonionic filler and unsaturated amide monomer (AM) by graft polymerization and crosslinking, and the optimal gel formula, which has strong gelling strength and controllable gelation time, is obtained by the optimization of the concentration of main agent, AM/FT ratio, crosslinker, and initiator. To test the adaptability of the new HTG to heavy oil reservoirs and the performance of plugging steam channeling path and enhancing oil recovery, performance evaluation experiments and three-dimensional steam flooding and gel profile control experiments are conducted. The performance evaluation experiments indicate that the HTG has strong salt resistance and heat stability and still maintains strong gelling strength after 72 hrs at 200 °C. The singular sand-pack flooding experiments suggest that the HTG has good injectability, which can ensure the on-site construction safety. Moreover, the HTG has a high plugging pressure and washing out resistance to the high-temperature steam after gel forming and keeps the plugging ratio above 99.8% when the following steam injected volume reaches 10 PV after gel breakthrough. The three-dimensional steam flooding and gel profile control experiments results show that the HTG has good plugging performance in the steam channeling path and effectively controls its expanding. This forces the following steam, which is the steam injected after the gelling of HTG in the model, to flow through the steam unswept area, which improves the steam injection profile. During the gel profile control period, the cumulative oil production increases by 294.4 ml and the oil recovery is enhanced by 8.4%. Thus, this new HTG has a good effect in improving the steam injection profile and enhancing oil recovery and can be used to control the steam channeling in heavy oil reservoirs.


1999 ◽  
Vol 2 (03) ◽  
pp. 238-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raj K. Srivastava ◽  
Sam S. Huang ◽  
Mingzhe Dong

Summary A large number of heavy oil reservoirs in Canada and in other parts of the world are thin and marginal and thus unsuited for thermal recovery methods. Immiscible gas displacement appears to be a very promising enhanced oil recovery technique for these reservoirs. This paper discusses results of a laboratory investigation, including pressure/volume/temperature (PVT) studies and coreflood experiments, for assessing the suitability and effectiveness of three injection gases for heavy-oil recovery. The gases investigated were a flue gas (containing 15 mol % CO2 in N2), a produced gas (containing 15 mol?% CO2 in CH4), and pure CO2 . The test heavy-oil (14° API gravity) was collected from Senlac reservoir located in the Lloydminster area, Saskatchewan, Canada. PVT studies indicated that the important mechanism for Senlac oil recovery by gas injection was mainly oil viscosity reduction. Pure CO2 appeared to be the best recovery agent, followed by the produced gas. The coreflood results confirmed these findings. Nevertheless, produced gas and flue gas could be sufficiently effective flooding agents. Comparable oil recoveries in flue gas or produced gas runs were believed to be a combined result of two competing mechanisms—a free-gas mechanism provided by N2 or CH4 and a solubilization mechanism provided by CO2. This latter predominates in CO2 floods. Introduction A sizable number of heavy-oil reservoirs in Canada1 and in other parts of the world are thin and shaly. Some of these reservoirs are also characterized by low-oil saturation, heterogeneity, low permeability, and bottom water.2,3 For example, about 55% of 1.7 billion m3 of proven heavy-oil resource in the Lloydminster and Kindersley region in Saskatchewan, Canada, is contained in less than 5 m (15 ft.) pay zone and nearly 97% is in less than 10 m (30 ft.) pay zone.4,5 Primary and secondary methods combined recover only about 7% of the proven initial oil in place (IOIP).1 Such reservoirs are not amenable to thermal recovery methods: heat is lost excessively to surroundings and steam is scavenged by bottomwater zones.6,7 The immiscible gas displacement appears to be a very promising enhanced oil recovery (EOR) process for these thin reservoirs. The immiscible gas EOR process has the potential to access more than 90% of the total IOIP.1,7 It could, according to previous studies,6–12 recover up to an additional 30% IOIP incremental over that recovered by initial waterflood for some moderately viscous oils. For the development of a viable immiscible gas process applicable to moderately viscous heavy oils found in this sort of reservoirs, we selected three injection gases for study: CO2 reservoir-produced gas (RPG), and flue gas (FG) from power plant exhausts. Extensive literature is available on CO2 flooding for heavy-oil recovery, dealing with pressure/volume/temperature (PVT) behavior,3,6,7,13-15 oil recovery characteristics from linear and scaled models,3,6-8,10-12,15,16 numerical simulation, and field performance.17–19 However, only limited data are available on flue gas and produced gas flooding.20–22 To determine the most suitable gas for EOR application from laboratory investigations, we need knowledge of the physical and chemical interaction between gas, reservoir oil, and formation rock; and information on the recovery potential for various injection gases for a targeted oil. The test oil selected for this study was from the Senlac reservoir (14° API) located in northwest Saskatchewan (Lloydminster area). The PVT properties for the oil/injection gas mixtures were measured and compared. A comparative study of the oil recovery behavior for Senlac dead oil and Senlac reservoir fluid was carried out with different injection gases to assess their relative effectiveness for EOR. Senlac Reservoir Geology The Senlac oil pool is located within the lower Cretaceous sand/shale sequence of the Mannville Group. The Mannville thickens northward and lies unconformably on the Upper Devonian Carbonates of the Saskatchewan Group. The trapping mechanism for the oil is mainly stratigraphic. The lower Lloydminster oil reservoir is a wavy, laminated, very fine- to fine-grained, well sorted, and generally unconsolidated sandstone. It exhibits uniform dark oil staining throughout, interrupted by a number of shale beds of 2 to 9 m (6 to 27 ft) thick, which are distributed over the entire reservoir. The reservoir is overlain by a shale/siltstone/sandstone sequence and lies on a 3 m (9 ft) thick coal seam. The detailed reservoir (Senlac) data and operating characteristics are provided in Ref. 5. The reservoir temperature is 28°C (82.4°F) and the reservoir pressure varies between 2.5 and 4.1 MPa (363 and 595 psia). The virgin pressure of the reservoir at discovery was 5.4 MPa (783 psia) and the gas/oil ratio (GOR) was 16.2 sm3/m3 (89.8 sft3 /bbl). The reservoir matrix has a porosity of about 27.7% by volume and permeability of about 2.5 mD. The average water saturation is about 32% pore volume (PV). The pattern configuration for oil production is five-spot on a 16.2 ha (40 acre) drainage area. The estimated primary and secondary (solution gas and waterflood) recovery is 5.5% of the initial oil in place. Experiment Wellhead Dead Oil and Brine. Senlac wellhead dead oil and formation brine (from Well 16-35-38-27 W3M) were supplied by Wascana Energy, Inc. The oil was cleaned for the experiments by removal of basic sediment and water (BS&W) through high-speed centrifugation. The chemical and physical properties of cleaned Senlac stock tank oil are shown in Table 1. The formation brine was vacuum filtered twice to remove iron contamination from the sample barrels.


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