scholarly journals 3D experimental investigation on enhanced oil recovery by flue gas assisted steam assisted gravity drainage

2021 ◽  
pp. 014459872110065
Author(s):  
Lei Tao ◽  
Xiao Yuan ◽  
Sen Huang ◽  
Nannan Liu ◽  
Na Zhang ◽  
...  

Flue gas assisted steam assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) is a frontier technology to enhance oil recovery for heavy oil reservoirs. The carbon dioxide generated from the thermal recovery of heavy oil can be utilized and consumed to mitigate climate warming for the world. However, most studies are limited to merely use numerical simulation or small physical simulation device and hardly focus on large scale three-dimensions experiment, which cannot fully investigate the enhanced oil recovery (EOR) mechanism of flue gas assisted SAGD, thus the effect of flue gas on SAGD production performance is still not very clear. In this paper, large-scaled and high temperature and pressure resistant 3D physical simulation experiment was conducted, where simulated the real reservoir to a maximum extent, and systematically explored the EOR mechanisms of the flue gas assisted SAGD. Furthermore, the differences between the steam huff and puff, SAGD and flue gas assisted SAGD are discussed. The experimental result showed that the production effect of SAGD was improved by injecting flue gas, with the oil recovery was increased by 5.7%. With the help of thermocouple temperature measuring sensors, changes of temperature field display that flue gas can promote lateral re-development of the steam chamber, and the degree of reservoir exploitation around the horizontal wells has been increased particularly. What’s more, the addition of flue gas further increased the content of light components and decreased the content of heavy by comparing the content of heavy oil components produced in different production times.

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weiqiang Li ◽  
Daulat D. Mamora

Abstract Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) is one successful thermal recovery technique applied in the Athabasca oil sands in Canada to produce the very viscous bitumen. Water for SAGD is limited in supply and expensive to treat and to generate steam. Consequently, we conducted a study into injecting high-temperature solvent instead of steam to recover Athabasca oil. In this study, hexane (C6) coinjection at condensing condition is simulated using CMG STARS to analyze the drainage mechanism inside the vapor-solvent chamber. The production performance is compared with an equivalent steam injection case based on the same Athabasca reservoir condition. Simulation results show that C6 is vaporized and transported into the vapor-solvent chamber. At the condensing condition, high temperature C6 reduces the viscosity of the bitumen more efficiently than steam and can displace out all the original oil. The oil production rate with C6 injection is about 1.5 to 2 times that of steam injection with oil recovery factor of about 100% oil initially-in-place. Most of the injected C6 can be recycled from the reservoir and from the produced oil, thus significantly reduce the solvent cost. Results of our study indicate that high-temperature solvent injection appears feasible although further technical and economic evaluation of the process is required.


1999 ◽  
Vol 2 (03) ◽  
pp. 238-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raj K. Srivastava ◽  
Sam S. Huang ◽  
Mingzhe Dong

Summary A large number of heavy oil reservoirs in Canada and in other parts of the world are thin and marginal and thus unsuited for thermal recovery methods. Immiscible gas displacement appears to be a very promising enhanced oil recovery technique for these reservoirs. This paper discusses results of a laboratory investigation, including pressure/volume/temperature (PVT) studies and coreflood experiments, for assessing the suitability and effectiveness of three injection gases for heavy-oil recovery. The gases investigated were a flue gas (containing 15 mol % CO2 in N2), a produced gas (containing 15 mol?% CO2 in CH4), and pure CO2 . The test heavy-oil (14° API gravity) was collected from Senlac reservoir located in the Lloydminster area, Saskatchewan, Canada. PVT studies indicated that the important mechanism for Senlac oil recovery by gas injection was mainly oil viscosity reduction. Pure CO2 appeared to be the best recovery agent, followed by the produced gas. The coreflood results confirmed these findings. Nevertheless, produced gas and flue gas could be sufficiently effective flooding agents. Comparable oil recoveries in flue gas or produced gas runs were believed to be a combined result of two competing mechanisms—a free-gas mechanism provided by N2 or CH4 and a solubilization mechanism provided by CO2. This latter predominates in CO2 floods. Introduction A sizable number of heavy-oil reservoirs in Canada1 and in other parts of the world are thin and shaly. Some of these reservoirs are also characterized by low-oil saturation, heterogeneity, low permeability, and bottom water.2,3 For example, about 55% of 1.7 billion m3 of proven heavy-oil resource in the Lloydminster and Kindersley region in Saskatchewan, Canada, is contained in less than 5 m (15 ft.) pay zone and nearly 97% is in less than 10 m (30 ft.) pay zone.4,5 Primary and secondary methods combined recover only about 7% of the proven initial oil in place (IOIP).1 Such reservoirs are not amenable to thermal recovery methods: heat is lost excessively to surroundings and steam is scavenged by bottomwater zones.6,7 The immiscible gas displacement appears to be a very promising enhanced oil recovery (EOR) process for these thin reservoirs. The immiscible gas EOR process has the potential to access more than 90% of the total IOIP.1,7 It could, according to previous studies,6–12 recover up to an additional 30% IOIP incremental over that recovered by initial waterflood for some moderately viscous oils. For the development of a viable immiscible gas process applicable to moderately viscous heavy oils found in this sort of reservoirs, we selected three injection gases for study: CO2 reservoir-produced gas (RPG), and flue gas (FG) from power plant exhausts. Extensive literature is available on CO2 flooding for heavy-oil recovery, dealing with pressure/volume/temperature (PVT) behavior,3,6,7,13-15 oil recovery characteristics from linear and scaled models,3,6-8,10-12,15,16 numerical simulation, and field performance.17–19 However, only limited data are available on flue gas and produced gas flooding.20–22 To determine the most suitable gas for EOR application from laboratory investigations, we need knowledge of the physical and chemical interaction between gas, reservoir oil, and formation rock; and information on the recovery potential for various injection gases for a targeted oil. The test oil selected for this study was from the Senlac reservoir (14° API) located in northwest Saskatchewan (Lloydminster area). The PVT properties for the oil/injection gas mixtures were measured and compared. A comparative study of the oil recovery behavior for Senlac dead oil and Senlac reservoir fluid was carried out with different injection gases to assess their relative effectiveness for EOR. Senlac Reservoir Geology The Senlac oil pool is located within the lower Cretaceous sand/shale sequence of the Mannville Group. The Mannville thickens northward and lies unconformably on the Upper Devonian Carbonates of the Saskatchewan Group. The trapping mechanism for the oil is mainly stratigraphic. The lower Lloydminster oil reservoir is a wavy, laminated, very fine- to fine-grained, well sorted, and generally unconsolidated sandstone. It exhibits uniform dark oil staining throughout, interrupted by a number of shale beds of 2 to 9 m (6 to 27 ft) thick, which are distributed over the entire reservoir. The reservoir is overlain by a shale/siltstone/sandstone sequence and lies on a 3 m (9 ft) thick coal seam. The detailed reservoir (Senlac) data and operating characteristics are provided in Ref. 5. The reservoir temperature is 28°C (82.4°F) and the reservoir pressure varies between 2.5 and 4.1 MPa (363 and 595 psia). The virgin pressure of the reservoir at discovery was 5.4 MPa (783 psia) and the gas/oil ratio (GOR) was 16.2 sm3/m3 (89.8 sft3 /bbl). The reservoir matrix has a porosity of about 27.7% by volume and permeability of about 2.5 mD. The average water saturation is about 32% pore volume (PV). The pattern configuration for oil production is five-spot on a 16.2 ha (40 acre) drainage area. The estimated primary and secondary (solution gas and waterflood) recovery is 5.5% of the initial oil in place. Experiment Wellhead Dead Oil and Brine. Senlac wellhead dead oil and formation brine (from Well 16-35-38-27 W3M) were supplied by Wascana Energy, Inc. The oil was cleaned for the experiments by removal of basic sediment and water (BS&W) through high-speed centrifugation. The chemical and physical properties of cleaned Senlac stock tank oil are shown in Table 1. The formation brine was vacuum filtered twice to remove iron contamination from the sample barrels.


2011 ◽  
Vol 367 ◽  
pp. 403-412 ◽  
Author(s):  
Babs Mufutau Oyeneyin ◽  
Amol Bali ◽  
Ebenezer Adom

Most of the heavy oil resources in the world are in sandstone reservoir rocks, the majority of which are unconsolidated sands which presents unique challenges for effective sand management. Because they are viscous and have less mobility, then appropriate recovery mechanisms that lower the viscosity to the point where it can readily flow into the wellbore and to the surface are required. There are many cold and thermal recovery methods assisted by gravity drainage being employed by the oil industry. These are customised for specific reservoir characteristics with associated sand production and management problems. Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) based on horizontal wells and gravity drainage, is becoming very popular in the heavy oil industry as a thermal viscosity reduction technique. SAGD has the potential to generate a heavy oil recovery factor of up to 65% but there are challenges to ‘’realising the limit’’. The process requires elaborate planning and is influenced by a combination of factors. This paper presents unique models being developed to address the issue of multiphase steam-condensed water-heavy oil modelling. It addresses the effects of transient issues such as the changing pore size distribution due to compaction on the bulk and shear viscosities of the non-Newtonian heavy oil and the impact on the reservoir productivity, thermal capacity of the heavy oil, toe-to-heel steam injection rate and quality for horizontal well applications. Specific case studies are presented to illustrate how the models can be used for detailed risk assessment for SAGD design and real-time process optimisation necessary to maximise production at minimum drawdown. Nomenclature


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 5426-5435
Author(s):  
Jianliang Zhang ◽  
Fei Han ◽  
Zhengda Yang ◽  
Liqiang Zhang ◽  
Xinwei Wang ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 243-249 ◽  
pp. 6237-6240
Author(s):  
You Jun Ji ◽  
Jian Jun Liu ◽  
Nelly Zhang

For an extra heavy oil reservoir with top water in Liaohe Oilfield, it is inefficiently and hard to produce by conventional thermal recovery. In this regard, the numerical modeling software – CMG is used to analyze the recovery of this reservoir by Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) and Steam and incondensable gas-assisted gravity push (SAGP). The production indicators, development effects and distribution of field parameters of these two techniques are contrasted and analyzed, and the injection and production parameters for application of SAGP in wells are optimized. The study shows that, for this extra heavy oil reservoir with top water, SAGP is more effective than SAGD, and the former can reduce the steam demand, improve the oil/steam ratio (OSR), prolong the development and enhance the recovery. It is recommended, during application of SAGP on site, to inject nitrogen at volume fraction of 30-40% and when the steam chamber expands to a section with 1/3 net pay thickness away to the top water.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document