A New Way to Forecast Gas-Oil Ratios GOR and Solution Gas Production from Unconventional Oil Reservoirs

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ibukun Makinde
Fuel ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 300 ◽  
pp. 120982
Author(s):  
Junrong Liu ◽  
James J. Sheng ◽  
Hossein Emadibaladehi ◽  
Jiawei Tu

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunfang Fan ◽  
Amy T. Kan ◽  
Ping Zhang ◽  
Haiping Lu ◽  
Sara Work ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julieta Alvarez ◽  
Oswaldo Espinola ◽  
Luis Rodrigo Diaz ◽  
Lilith Cruces

Abstract Increase recovery from mature oil reservoirs requires the definition of enhanced reservoir management strategies, involving the implementation of advanced methodologies and technologies in the field's operation. This paper presents a digital workflow enabling the integration of commonly isolated elements such as: gauges, flowmeters, inflow control devices; analysis methods and data, used to improve scientific understanding of subsurface flow dynamics and determine improved operational decisions that support field's reservoir management strategy. It also supports evaluation of reservoir extent, hydraulic communication, artificial lift impact in the near-wellbore zone and reservoir response to injected fluids and coning phenomenon. This latest is used as an example to demonstrate the applicability of this workflow to improve and support operational decisions, minimizing water and gas production due to coning, that usually results in increasing production operation costs and it has a direct impact decreasing reservoir energy in mature saturated oil reservoirs. This innovative workflow consists on the continuous interpretation of data from downhole gauges, referred in this paper as data-driven; as well as analytical and numerical simulation methodologies using real-time raw data as an input, referred in this paper as model-driven, not commonly used to analyze near wellbore subsurface phenomena like coning and its impact in surface operation. The resulting analyses are displayed through an extensive visualization tool that provides instant insight to reservoir characterization and productivity groups, improving well and reservoir performance prediction capabilities for complex reservoirs such as mature saturated reservoirs with an associated aquifer, where undesired water and gas production is a continuous challenge that incorporates unexpected operational expenses.


1998 ◽  
Vol 1 (05) ◽  
pp. 416-420 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.E. Petrosky ◽  
F. Farshad

This paper (SPE 51395) was revised for publication from paper SPE 26644, first presented at the 1993 SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition, Houston, 3-6 October. Original manuscript received for review 25 October 1993. Revised manuscript received 1 October 1997. Paper peer approved 28 January 1998. Summary New empirical pressure-volume-temperature (PVT) correlations for estimating bubblepoint pressure, solution gas-oil ratio (GOR), bubblepoint oil formation volume factor (FVF), and undersaturated isothermal oil compressibility have been developed as a function of commonly available field data. Results show that these PVT properties can be predicted with average absolute errors ranging from 0.64% for bubblepoint oil FVF to 6.66% for undersaturated isothermal oil compressibility. P. 416


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