Non-linear flow reduction factor and effective permeability of fractal fracture network

2019 ◽  
Vol 66 ◽  
pp. 138-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianting Zhu
2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wang Shou-long ◽  
Li Ai-fen ◽  
Peng Rui-gang ◽  
Yu Miao ◽  
Fu Shuai-shi

Objective:The rheological properties of oil severely affect the determination of percolation theory, development program, production technology and oil-gathering and transferring process, especially for super heavy oil reservoirs. This paper illustrated the basic seepage morphology of super heavy oil in micro pores based on its rheological characteristics.Methods:The non-linear flow law and start-up pressure gradient of super heavy oil under irreducible water saturation at different temperatures were performed with different permeable sand packs. Meanwhile, the empirical formulas between start-up pressure gradient, the parameters describing the velocity-pressure drop curve and the ratio of gas permeability of a core to fluid viscosity were established.Results:The results demonstrate that temperature and core permeability have significant effect on the non-linear flow characteristics of super heavy oil. The relationship between start-up pressure gradient of oil, the parameters representing the velocity-pressure drop curve and the ratio of core permeability to fluid viscosity could be described as a power function.Conclusion:Above all, the quantitative description of the seepage law of super heavy oil reservoir was proposed in this paper, and finally the empirical diagram for determining the minimum and maximum start-up pressure of heavy oil with different viscosity in different permeable formations was obtained.


2017 ◽  
Vol 773 ◽  
pp. 68-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Acharya ◽  
D. Adamová ◽  
J. Adolfsson ◽  
M.M. Aggarwal ◽  
G. Aglieri Rinella ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1964 ◽  
Vol 4 (04) ◽  
pp. 291-306 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Kenneth Eilerts

Abstract Finite difference equations were programmed and used to integrate the second-order, second-degree, partial differential equation with variable coefficients that represents the transient linear flow of gas-condensate fluids. Effect was given to the change with pressure of the compressibility factor, the viscosity, and the effective permeability and to change of the absolute permeability with distance. Integrations used as illustrations include recovery of fluid from a reservoir at a constant production rate followed by recovery at a declining rate calculated to maintain a constant pressure at the producing boundary. The time required to attain such a limiting pressure and the fraction of the reserve recovered in that time vary markedly with properties of the fluid represented by the coefficients. Fluid also is returned to the reservoir at a constant rate, until initial formation pressure is attained at the input boundary, and then at a calculated rate that will maintain but not exceed the limiting pressure. The computing programs were used to calculate the results that would be obtained in a series of back-pressure tests made at selected intervals of reservoir depletion. If effect is given to the variations in properties of the fluid that actually occur, then a series of back-pressure curves one for each stage of reserve depletion -- is required to indicate open-flow capacity and related flow characteristics dependably. The isochronal performance method for determining flow characteristics of a well was simulated by computation. Introduction The back-pressure test procedure is based on a derivation of the equation for steady-state radial flow of a gas, the properties of which are of necessity assumed to remain unchanged in applying the test results. The properties of most natural gases being recovered from reservoirs change as the reserve is depleted and pressures decline, and the results of an early back-pressure test may not be dependable for estimating the future delivery capacity of a well. The compressibility factor of a fluid under an initial pressure of 10,000 psia can change 45 per cent and the viscosity can change 70 per cent during the productive life of the reservoir. There are indications that the effective permeability to the flowing fluid can become 50 per cent of the original absolute permeability before enough liquid collects in the structure about a well as pressure declines to permit flow of liquid into the well. The advent of programmed electronic computing made practicable the integration of nonlinear, second-order, partial differential equations pertaining to flow in reservoirs. Aronofsky and Porter represented the compressibility factor and the viscosity by a linear relationship, and integrated the equation for radial flow of gas for pressures up to 1,200 psi. Bruce, Peaceman, Rachford and Rice integrated the partial differential equations for both linear and radial unsteady-state flow of ideal gas in porous media. Their published results were a substantial guide in this study of integration of the partial differential equation of linear flow with coefficients of the equation variable. The computing program was developed to treat effective permeability as being both distance-dependent and pressure-dependent. In this study all examples of effective permeability are assumptions designed primarily to aid in developing programs for giving effect to this and other variable coefficients. The accumulation of data for expressing the pressure dependency of the effective permeability is the objective of a concurrent investigation. SPEJ P. 291^


2017 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 126-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen-Dong Wang ◽  
Yu-Liang Su ◽  
Qi Zhang ◽  
Gang Xiang ◽  
Shi-Ming Cui

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