Evaluation of Cyclic Steam Injection with Carbon Dioxide Enhanced Oil Recovery from Extra Heavy Oil Reservoir

Author(s):  
Zhang-cong Liu ◽  
Chang-chun Chen ◽  
Zhao-peng Yang ◽  
Xing-min Li ◽  
Yang Shen ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 550-553 ◽  
pp. 2878-2882 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ping Yuan Gai ◽  
Fang Hao Yin ◽  
Ting Ting Hao ◽  
Zhong Ping Zhang

Based on the issue of enhancing oil recovery of heavy oil reservoir after steam injection, this paper studied the development characteristics of hot water flooding in different rhythm (positive rhythm, anti-rhythm, complex rhythm) reservoir after steam drive by means of physical simulation. The research shows that the positive rhythm reservoir has a large swept volume with steam flooding under the influence of steam overlay and steam channeling. Anti-rhythm reservoir has a large swept volume with hot water flooding, because hot water firstly flows along the high permeability region in upper part of the reservoir, in the process of displacement, hot water migrates to the bottom of reservoir successively for its higher density.


2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamer Moussa ◽  
Mohamed Mahmoud ◽  
Esmail M. A. Mokheimer ◽  
Dhafer Al-Shehri ◽  
Shirish Patil

This paper introduces a novel approach to generate downhole steam using thermochemical reactions to overcome the challenges associated with heavy oil resources. The procedure developed in this paper is applied to a heavy oil reservoir, which contains heavy oil (12–23 API) with an estimated range of original oil in place (OOIP) of 13–25 billion barrels while its several technical challenges are limiting its commercial development. One of these challenges is the overlying 1800–2000-ft thick permafrost layer, which causes significant heat losses when steam is injected from the surface facilities. The objective of this research is to conduct a feasibility study on the application of the new approach in which the steam is generated downhole using the thermochemical reaction (SGT) combined with steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) to recover heavy oil from the reservoir. A numerical simulation model for a heavy oil reservoir is built using a CMG-STARS simulator, which is then integrated with a matlab framework to study different recovery strategies on the project profitability. The design and operational parameters studied and optimized in this paper involve (1) well configurations and locations and (2) steam injection rate and quality as well as a steam trap in SAGD wells. The results show that the in situ SGT is a successful approach to recover heavy oil from the reservoir, and it yields high-project profitability. The main reason for this outperformance is the ability of SGT to avoid the significant heat losses and associated costs associated with the surface steam injection.


2014 ◽  
Vol 962-965 ◽  
pp. 443-447
Author(s):  
Hong Jun Sun ◽  
Shi Qing Hu ◽  
Pei Wu Li

In order to improve the flowability of crude oil, heavy oil reservoir usually developed by steam injection. While this process produces a lot of greenhouse gases. To deep reservoir, heat loss in the wellbore tends to more severe and thermal efficiency is lower. In-situ Combustion (ISC) is featured by heavy components’ combustion, high thermal efficiency and high oil recovery. Those advantages are outstanding especially in the aspects of improving thermal efficiency and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. This paper researched on ISC EOR process in a complex fault block, including reservoir design and performance evaluation. Remarkable development results have been achieved, which shows the potential for ISC technology and this paper provides a reference for the development of similar reservoirs.


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