scholarly journals Study on Pulse Characteristic of Produced Crude Composition in CO2 Flooding Pilot Test

Geofluids ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Pengxiang Diwu ◽  
Tongjing Liu ◽  
Zhenjiang You ◽  
Ganggang Hou ◽  
Runwei Qiao ◽  
...  

It has been observed in many laboratory tests that the carbon number of the maximum concentration components (CNMCC) of produced oil varies monotonically with CO2 injection volume at the core scale. However, in CO2 flooding pilot test at the field scale, we find that the CNMCC is usually nonmonotonic function of CO2 injection volume, which is called “pulse characteristic” of CNMCC. To investigate the mechanism of this phenomenon, we analyze the physical process of CO2 flooding in heterogeneous reservoir and explain the reason of the pulse characteristic of CNMCC. Moreover, two 3D reservoir models with 35 nonaqueous components are proposed for numerical simulation to validate the conjecture. The simulation results show that pulse characteristic of CNMCC only occurs in the heterogeneous model, confirming that the pulse characteristic results from the channeling path between wells, which yields nonmonotonic variation of oil-CO2 mixing degree. Based on it, a new method can be developed to identify and quantify the reservoir heterogeneity.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Precious Ogbeiwi ◽  
Karl Stephen

Abstract The compositional simulations are required to model CO2 flooding are computationally expensive particularly for fine-gridded models that have high resolutions, and many components. Upscaling procedures can be used in the subsurface flow models to reduce the high computation requirements of the fine grid simulations and accurately model miscible CO2 flooding. However, the effects of physical instabilities are often not well represented and captured by the upscaling procedures. This paper presents an approach for upscaling of miscible displacements is presented which adequately represents physical instabilities such as viscous and heterogeneity induced fingering on coarser grids using pseudoisation techniques. The approach was applied to compositional numerical simulations of two-dimensional reservoir models with a focus on CO2 injection. Our approach is based on the pseudoisation of relative permeability and the application of transport coefficients to upscale viscous fingering and heterogeneity-induced channelling in a multi-contact miscible CO2 injection. Pseudo-relative permeability curves were computed using a pseudoisation technique and applied in combination with transport coefficients to upscale the behaviour of fine-scale miscible CO2 flood simulations to coarser scales. The accuracy of the results of the pseudoisation procedures were assessed by applying statistical analysis to compare them to the results of the fine grid simulations. It is observed from the results that the coarse models provide accurate predictions of the miscible displacement process and that the fingering regimes are adequately captured in the coarse models. The study presents a framework that can be employed to represent the dynamics of physical instabilities associated with miscible CO2 displacements in upscaled coarser grid reservoir models.


1990 ◽  
Vol 112 (4) ◽  
pp. 457-463 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maithili Sharan ◽  
M. P. Singh ◽  
A. Aminataei

A two layer model for the blood oxygenation in pulmonary capillaries is proposed. The model consists of a core of erythrocytes surrounded by a symmetrically placed plasma layer. The governing equations in the core describe the free molecular diffusion, convection, and facilitated diffusion due to the presence of haemoglobin. The corresponding equations in the plasma layer are based on the free molecular diffusion and the convective effect of the blood. According to the axial train model for the blood flow proposed by Whitmore (1967), the core will move with a uniform velocity whereas flow in the plasma layer will be fully developed. The resulting system of nonlinear partial differential equations is solved numerically. A fixed point iterative technique is used to deal with the nonlinearities. The distance traversed by the blood before getting fully oxygenated is computed. It is shown that the concentration of O2 increases continuously along the length of the capillary for a given ratio of core radius to capillary radius. It is found that the rate of oxygenation increases as the core to capillary ratio decreases. The equilibration length increases with a heterogeneous model in comparison to that in a homogeneous model. The effect of capillary diameters and core radii on the rate of oxygenation has also been examined.


1982 ◽  
Vol 22 (06) ◽  
pp. 805-815 ◽  
Author(s):  
William F. Yellig

Yellig, William F., SPE, Amoco Production Co. Abstract This paper presents results of an extensive study to understand CO2 displacement of Levelland (TX) reservoir oil. The work was conducted to support Levelland CO2 pilots currently in progress. Experimental displacement tests were conducted at various pressures, core lengths, and CO2 frontal advance rates. The experimental system included a novel analytical technique to obtain effluent compositional profiles within the oil-moving zone at test conditions. The results of this study show that at pressures greater than the CO2 minimum miscibility pressure (MMP), a multicontact miscible displacement mechanism predominates. Miscibility is developed in situ by vaporization or extraction-type mass transfer. The laboratory lengths required for CO2 to develop miscibility and exhibit miscible displacement efficiency were found dependent on the phase equilibria of the CO2/Levelland oil system. Displacements requiring the greatest length to develop miscibility were at pressures where single-contact mixtures of CO2 and Levelland oil form two liquid phases. A companion paper demonstrates the use of the analytical technique developed in this study to obtain process data from a CO2 field pilot test. In addition, the mechanistic information obtained from this study is used to interpret the process data from the pilot test. The results have application to other reservoir oils whose phase equilibria with CO2 are similar to the CO2/ Levelland oil system. Introduction Miscible CO2 flooding is developing rapidly as a commercial enhanced oil-recovery process. The successful design and interpretation of CO2 pilot tests and fieldwide floods are dependent on a good knowledge of the reservoir and the CO2 displacement process. The overall CO2 displacement process is shown schematically in Fig. 1. The main focus of this study concerned the oil moving zone (OMZ) and particularly the mechanisms by which this zone formed and by which CO2 displaced Levelland oil. Levelland oil was chosen because it is typical of many west Texas reservoir oils being considered for CO2 flooding. In addition, the CO2 pilot tests currently conducted in the Levelland field provide a direct application of this research. Several authors have discussed the displacement of reservoir oil by CO2. These discussions have centered around three primary displacement mechanisms: immiscible, multicontact or developed miscible, and contact miscible. In addition, two basic types of mass transfer have been postulated as responsible for the development of miscibility in a multicontact process: transfer of hydrocarbons from the in-place oil to the displacing CO2 (i.e., vaporization or extraction) and transfer of CO2 to the in-place oil (i.e., condensation). Vaporization and extraction are the same basic mass-transfer process. Vaporization refers to mass transfer from a liquid oil phase to a CO2-rich vapor phase and extraction refers to mass transfer from a liquid oil phase to a CO2-rich liquid phase. The distinction between vaporization and extraction is somewhat arbitrary in describing the CO2 process since it reflects the types of phases present only on first contact. One purpose of this paper is to present results of a comprehensive study to determine the mechanism by which CO2 displaces Levelland oil at reservoir conditions. SPEJ P. 805^


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.. Wang ◽  
X.. Liao ◽  
X.. Zhao ◽  
H.. Ye ◽  
X.. Dou ◽  
...  

Abstract As one kind of unconventional reservoirs, tight oil reservoir has become one of the main forces of oil reserves and production growth. The characteristics of tight oil reservoir are low porosity and ultra-low permeability, thus stimulated reservoir volume (SRV) should be conducted whether applying the mode of vertical wells or horizontal wells production. Tight oil reservoir is mostly developed by natural depletion or water flooding recently, but the problems are existed, including low recovery factor with natural depletion and the difficulty of water injection. To further improve the development effect of tight oil reservoir, CO2 flooding is proposed. Based on chang-8 tight oil reservoir in Ordos Basin, an oil sample of typical block is selected. The PVT experiments are conducted. The compositional numerical model of five-spot pattern is established with a horizontal well in the middle and 4 vertical wells on the edge. Based on the model, several CO2 flooding scenarios of horizontal well with different completion measures are studied. Furthermore, parameters such as the formation pressure, production rate, shut-in gas-oil ratio and total gas injection volume are optimized. The results of this study show that the recovery factor of horizontal well with SRV is higher than those of horizontal well and conventional fractured horizontal well. The minimum miscible pressure (MMP) and the total gas injection volume are two key factors of CO2 flooding effect. CO2 flooding of volume fractured horizontal well in tight oil reservoir can not only improve oil recovery, but also realize CO2 geological sequestration. It plays dual benefits of economy and environment. The study gives new ideas of CO2 flooding with volume fractured horizontal well for the Ordos Basin tight oil reservoir. It can be helpful for rapid and effective development of tight oil reservoirs in Ordos Basin.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammadhossein Mohammadlou ◽  
◽  
Matthew Guy Reppert ◽  
Roxane Del Negro ◽  
George Jones ◽  
...  

During well planning, drillers and petrophysicists have different principle objectives. The petrophysicist’s aim is to acquire critical well data, but this can lead to increased operational risk. The driller is focused on optimizing the well design, which can result in compromised data quality. In extreme cases, the impact of well design on petrophysical data can lead to erroneous post-well results that impact the entire value-chain assessment and decision making toward field development. In this paper, we present a case study from a syn-rift, Upper Jurassic reservoir in the Norwegian Sea where well design significantly impacted reservoir characterization. Three wells (exploration, appraisal, and geopilot) are compared in order to demonstrate the impact of overbalanced drilling on well data from both logs and core. Implications for reservoir quality assessment, volume estimates, and the errors introduced into both a static geomodel and dynamic reservoir simulation are discussed. This case study highlights the importance of optimizing well design for petrophysical data collection and demonstrates the potential for value creation. Extensive data collection was initially carried out in both exploration and appraisal wells, including full sets of logging while drilling (LWD), wireline logging, fluid sampling, and extensive coring. Both wells were drilled with considerable overbalanced mud weights due to the risk of overpressured reservoirs in the region. The log data was subsequently corrected for significant mud-filtration invasion, with calibration to core measurements guiding the interpretation. Geological and reservoir models were built based on results from the two wells, and development wells were planned accordingly. A thorough investigation of core material raised suspicion that there could also be a significant adverse effect of core properties resulting from overbalanced drilling. The implications were so significant for the reservoir volume that a strategic decision was made to drill a geopilot well close to the initial exploration well, prior to field development drilling. The well was drilled six years after the initial exploration phase with considerably lower overbalance. Extensive well data, including one core, were acquired. The recovered core was crucial in order to compare the reservoir properties for comparable facies between all three wells. The results from the core demonstrate distinctly different rock quality characteristics, especially at the high end of the reservoir quality spectrum. Results of the core study confirmed the initial hypothesis that overbalanced drilling had significantly impacted the properties of the core as well as the well logs. The study concluded that the updated reservoir model properties would significantly increase the in-place volumes compared to the pre-geopilot estimate. This study shows how well design adversely affected petrophysical measurements and how errors in these data compromised geological and reservoir models, leading to a suboptimal field development plan that eroded significant value. This example provides a case study that can be used to improve the well design so that petrophysicists and drillers can both be part of the same value creation result. Future work will include further laboratory investigations on the effects of high overbalanced drilling on core and possible “root causes” for compromised core integrity.


2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
pp. eaau2947 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Wang ◽  
Wei Chen ◽  
Fu-Kuo Chiang ◽  
A. Iulian Dugulan ◽  
Yuanjun Song ◽  
...  

The Fe-catalyzed Fischer-Tropsch (FT) reaction constitutes the core of the coal-to-liquids (CTL) process, which converts coal into liquid fuels. Conventional Fe-based catalysts typically convert 30% of the CO feed to CO2 in the FT unit. Decreasing the CO2 release in the FT step will reduce costs and enhance productivity of the overall process. In this context, we synthesize phase-pure ε(′)-Fe2C catalysts exhibiting low CO2 selectivity by carefully controlling the pretreatment and carburization conditions. Kinetic data reveal that liquid fuels can be obtained free from primary CO2. These catalysts displayed stable FT performance at 23 bar and 235°C for at least 150 hours. Notably, in situ characterization emphasizes the high durability of pure ε(′)-Fe2C in an industrial pilot test. These findings contribute to the development of new Fe-based FT catalysts for next-generation CTL processes.


SPE Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Muhammad Aslam Md Yusof ◽  
Mohamad Arif Ibrahim ◽  
Mazlin Idress ◽  
Ahmad Kamal Idris ◽  
Ismail Mohd Saaid ◽  
...  

Summary The injection of carbon dioxide (CO2) into saline aquifers is highlighted as an effective technique to permanently secure anthropogenic gas produced from high CO2 gas fields in the Southeast Asia region. However, previous studies indicate that CO2 injectivity can be impaired primarily due to the interactions between CO2/brine/rock. In this paper, we investigate the effect of a CO2 injection scheme, rock permeability, brine type, and salinity on CO2 injectivity, which is presented by permeability alteration. A CO2 coreflood experiment and the characterization of the rock and effluent produced are presented. Furthermore, core samples with different permeabilities of the typical geological storage for sequestration were selected and analyzed using X-ray fluorescence (XRF), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and field-emission scanning electron microscopy equipped with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (FESEM-EDX). The cores were then saturated with synthetic brine composed of 6,000, 30,000 or 100,000 parts per million (ppm) of either sodium chloride (NaCl), potassium chloride (KCl), or calcium chloride (CaCl2). Subsequently, the core samples were injected by either supercritical CO2 (scCO2), CO2-saturated brine, or CO2-saturated brine followed by scCO2. The fines particles from the collected effluent were separated for further analysis. The results indicate that a CO2 injection scheme, injection flow rate, brine salinity, and initial rock permeability are the principal factors that contribute to the permeability alteration of the core samples. It was also found from FESEM-EDX analysis of the produced fines that the precipitated salt, silica grains, and kaolinite migrated during scCO2 injection, suggesting the dissolution and precipitation of minerals. This phenomenon led to the migration of particles, some of which plugged the pore spaces and reduced the permeability. Besides, the core saturated with CaCl2 brine was the only sample with improvement in permeability after the CO2 flooding experiment.


Author(s):  
Chitralkumar V. Naik ◽  
Karthik V. Puduppakkam ◽  
Ellen Meeks

Simulation of the combustion of fuels used in transportation and energy applications requires accurate chemistry representation of the fuel. Surrogate fuels are typically used to represent liquid fuels, such as gasoline, diesel or jet fuel, where the surrogate contains a handful of components. For gaseous fuels, surrogates are effectively used as well, where methane may be used to represent natural gas, for example. An accurate chemistry model of a surrogate fuel means a detailed reaction mechanism that contains the kinetics of all the molecular components of the fuel model. Since large hydrocarbons break down to smaller molecules during combustion, the core chemistry of C0 to C4 carbon number is critical to all such fuel models, whether gaseous or liquid. The usual method of assessing how accurate the fuel chemistry is involves modeling of fundamental combustion experiments, where the experimental conditions are well enough defined and well enough represented by the reacting-flow model to isolate the kinetics in comparisons between predictions and data. In the work reported here, we have been focused on developing a more comprehensive and accurate core (C0−C4) mechanism. Recently, we revisited the core mechanism to improve predictions of the pure saturated components (J Eng. Gas Turbines Power (2012) 134; doi:10.1115/1.4004388). In the current work, we focused on combustion of unsaturated C0−C4 fuel components and on the blends of C0−C4 fuels, including saturated components. The aim has been to improve predictions for the widest range of fundamental experiments as possible, while maintaining the accuracy achieved by the existing mechanism and the previous study of saturated components. In the validation, we considered experimental measurements of ignition delay, flame speed and extinction strain rate, as well as species composition in stirred reactors, flames and flow reactors. These experiments cover a wide range of temperatures, fuel-air ratios, and pressures. As in the previous work for saturated compounds, we examined uncertainties in the core reaction mechanism; including thermochemical parameters derived from a wide variety of sources, including experimental measurements, ab initio calculations, estimation methods and systematic optimization studies. Using sensitivity analysis, reaction-path analysis, consideration of recent focused studies of individual reactions, and an enforcement of data consistency, we have identified key updates required for the core mechanism. These updates resulted in improvements to predictions of results, as validated through comparison with experiments, for all the fuels considered, while maintaining the accuracy previously reported for the saturated C0−C4 components. Rate constants that were modified to improve predictions for a small number of reactions remain within expected uncertainty bounds.


2013 ◽  
Vol 333-335 ◽  
pp. 1820-1823
Author(s):  
Pu Yong Feng ◽  
Hong Bin Wang ◽  
Guang Zhi Han ◽  
Xue Fei Peng ◽  
Da Wang ◽  
...  

This paper discussed the effect of Suizhong 36-1 oilfield reinjection sewage on core permeability in different suspending particle sizes, different concentration of suspended substances and different injection volume of water. The experimental results showed that: The larger the suspended particles diameter, the greater the concentration, the higher the injury rate; The lower the formation permeability, the greater the damage; The core permeability was markedly decreased with the increase of the volume of injected water; The formation damage degree was D11 > mixed injection > well water.


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