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Pore-Scale Analysis of WAG & Development of a New Empirical Model. Centre for Petroleum Studies Department of Earth Science and Engineering . Imperial College London. Vural Sander Suicmez Dr. Mohammad Piri Prof. Martin J. Blunt 20 January 2006. Motivation.
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Pore-Scale Analysis of WAG & Development of a New Empirical Model Centre for Petroleum Studies Department of Earth Science and Engineering Imperial College London Vural Sander Suicmez Dr. Mohammad Piri Prof. Martin J. Blunt 20 January 2006
Motivation • Pore Network Modelling (Fatt, 1956). • Wide range of 3-phase flow scenarios. • Improvement in computational power. • A physically motivated three-phase relative permeability model (Blunt, 2000).
Outline • Introduction to WAG • What has already been done? (Piri and Blunt, 2005) • Two- and three-phase pore-scale fluid configurations • Displacement mechanisms • New work on Cyclic Injection (WAG) • New displacement mechanisms • Validating the model • Effects of Wettability • A New Relative Permeability Model • Isoperm Curves & Effect of Displacement Path • Oil & Gas Trapping • Conclusions
What is the problem? (Christensen et al., 1998)SPE 39833
What do we have? Piri, 2004 • A three-phase flow simulator (incorporating geologically realistic network model) with full extension of possible generic configurations for any wettability. • A robust clustering algorithm incorporating coalescence and break of trapped clusters. • Point-by-point comparison with data using saturation path tracking algorithm.
Water Oil Gas One- and Two-Phase Configurations
Water Oil Gas Three-Phase Configurations
* Connectivity and Clustering (Hoshen & Kopelman, 1976) Dead End Outlet Inlet Cluster is Connected Periodic Boundary Condition
Gas Configuration B Configuration A Configuration B Water Oil Configuration F Configuration A Configuration C Example Displacement Sequence Primary Drainage Water Flooding Gas Injection Layer Collapsing Gas Injection
Water Oil Gas Mobilising Oil by Double Displacement Trapped Oil
Multiple Displacements (Van Dijke & Sorbie, 2003) For a better connected network, double displacements are sufficient
Double Displacements • Gas Injection Gas Oil Water Gas Water Oil • Water Injection Water Oil Gas Water Gas Oil • Oil Injection Oil Gas Water Oil Water Gas
Model Validation (Oak, 1990) Water2 Gas1 Water1
Model Validation(Egermann et al, 2000) • Spreading Oil Layers • Water-Wet
Model Validation(Egermann et al, 2000) Water Gas
Generic WAG Study (Strongly Oil-Wet) • Spreading Oil Layers • Strongly Oil-Wet
Generic WAG Study (Strongly Oil-Wet) Gas1 Gas2 Water1 Water2
Oil Isoperm (Spiteri & Juanes, 2004) SPE 89921 Stone I Stone II
Oil Isoperm Water-wet Oil-wet
Displacement Path Water-gas Water-gas-water
water wet weakly wat-wet Hydrocarbon Trapping (Jerauld, 1996) SPE 36178
Conclusions • Double displacement mechanism plays an important role in a water-wet system. • Impact of WAG cycles on oil recovery lessened in an oil-wet medium. • Gas behaviour is complex, depends whether it is the most non-wetting phase or not. • Rel perms for different displacement paths are similar as a function of flowing saturation. • Further work on oil and gas trapping is necessary.
Acknowledgments We are thankful to the members of the Imperial College Consortium on Pore-Scale Network Modelling; • Shell • Schlumberger • Statoil • BHP • BG • Saudi Aramco • Eni • Total • Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corp. (JOGMEC) • Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) • EPSRC