Characterization of Fluvial Sedimentology for Reservoir Simulation Modeling

1990 ◽  
Vol 5 (03) ◽  
pp. 211-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adolfo Henriquez ◽  
Kelly J. Tyler ◽  
Andrew Hurst
Author(s):  
E. Ma ◽  
S. Ryzhov ◽  
S. Gheorghiu ◽  
O. Hegazy ◽  
M. Banagale ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Downey ◽  
Kiran Venepalli ◽  
Jim Erdle ◽  
Morgan Whitelock

Abstract The Permian Basin of west Texas is the largest and most prolific shale oil producing basin in the United States. Oil production from horizontal shale oil wells in the Permian Basin has grown from 5,000 BOPD in February, 2009 to 3.5 Million BOPD as of October, 2020, with 29,000 horizontal shale oil wells in production. The primary target for this horizontal shale oil development is the Wolfcamp shale. Oil production from these wells is characterized by high initial rates and steep declines. A few producers have begun testing EOR processes, specifically natural gas cyclic injection, or "Huff and Puff", with little information provided to date. Our objective is to introduce a novel EOR process that can greatly increase the production and recovery of oil from shale oil reservoirs, while reducing the cost per barrel of recovered oil. A superior shale oil EOR method is proposed that utilizes a triplex pump to inject a solvent liquid into the shale oil reservoir, and an efficient method to recover the injectant at the surface, for storage and reinjection. The process is designed and integrated during operation using compositional reservoir simulation in order to optimize oil recovery. Compositional simulation modeling of a Wolfcamp D horizontal producing oil well was conducted to obtain a history match on oil, gas, and water production. The matched model was then utilized to evaluate the shale oil EOR method under a variety of operating conditions. The modeling indicates that for this particular well, incremental oil production of 500% over primary EUR may be achieved in the first five years of EOR operation, and more than 700% over primary EUR after 10 years. The method, which is patented, has numerous advantages over cyclic gas injection, such as much greater oil recovery, much better economics/lower cost per barrel, lower risk of interwell communication, use of far less horsepower and fuel, shorter injection time, longer production time, smaller injection volumes, scalability, faster implementation, precludes the need for artificial lift, elimination of the need to buy and sell injectant during each cycle, ability to optimize each cycle by integration with compositional reservoir simulation modeling, and lower emissions. This superior shale oil EOR method has been modeled in the five major US shale oil plays, indicating large incremental oil recovery potential. The method is now being field tested to confirm reservoir simulation modeling projections. If implemented early in the life of a shale oil well, its application can slow the production decline rate, recover far more oil earlier and at lower cost, and extend the life of the well by several years, while precluding the need for artificial lift.


Author(s):  
Arnaud Fournillon ◽  
Giuseppe Bellentani ◽  
Andrea Moccia ◽  
Clement Jumeaucourt ◽  
Paolo Terdich ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 5 (02) ◽  
pp. 154-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Sarda ◽  
L. Jeannin ◽  
R. Basquet ◽  
B. Bourbiaux

Summary Advanced characterization methodology and software are now able to provide realistic pictures of fracture networks. However, these pictures must be validated against dynamic data like flowmeter, well-test, interference-test, or production data and calibrated in terms of hydraulic properties. This calibration and validation step is based on the simulation of those dynamic tests. What has to be overcome is the challenge of both accurately representing large and complex fracture networks and simulating matrix/ fracture exchanges with a minimum number of gridblocks. This paper presents an efficient, patented solution to tackle this problem. First, a method derived from the well-known dual-porosity concept is presented. The approach consists of developing an optimized, explicit representation of the fractured medium and specific treatments of matrix/fracture exchanges and matrix/matrix flows. In this approach, matrix blocks of different volumes and shapes are associated with each fracture cell depending on the local geometry of the surrounding fractures. The matrix-block geometry is determined with a rapid image-processing algorithm. The great advantage of this approach is that it can simulate local matrix/fracture exchanges on large fractured media in a much faster and more appropriate way. Indeed, the simulation can be carried out with a much smaller number of cells compared to a fully explicit discretization of both matrix and fracture media. The proposed approach presents other advantages owing to its great flexibility. Indeed, it accurately handles the cases in which flows are not controlled by fractures alone; either the fracture network may be not hydraulically connected from one well to another, or the matrix may have a high permeability in some places. Finally, well-test cases demonstrate the reliability of the method and its range of application. Introduction In recent years, numerous research programs have been focusing on the topic of fractured reservoirs. Major advances were made, and oil companies now benefit from efficient methodologies, tools, and software for fractured reservoir studies. Nowadays, a study of a fractured reservoir, from fracture detection to full-field simulation, includes the following main steps: geological fracture characterization, hydraulic characterization of fractures, upscaling of fracture properties, and fractured reservoir simulation. Research on fractured reservoir simulation has a long history. In the early 1960s, Barenblatt and Zheltov1 first introduced the dual-porosity concept, followed by Warren and Root,2 who proposed a simplified representation of fracture networks to be used in dual-porosity simulators. Based on this concept, reservoir simulators3 are now able to correctly reproduce the main driving mechanisms occurring in fractured reservoirs, such as water imbibition, gas/oil and water/oil gravity drainage, molecular diffusion, and convection in fractures. Even single-medium simulators can perform fractured reservoir simulation when adequate pseudocapillary pressure curves and pseudorelative permeability curves can be input. Indeed, except for particular cases such as thermal recovery processes, full-field simulation of fractured reservoirs is no longer a problem. Geological characterization of fractures progressed considerably in the 1990s. The challenge was to analyze and integrate all the available fracture data to provide a reliable description of the fracture network both at field scale and at local reservoir cell scale. Tools have been developed for merging seismic, borehole imaging, lithological, and outcrop data together with the help of geological and geomechanical rules.3 These tools benefited from the progress of seismic acquisition and borehole imaging. Indeed, accurate seismic data lead to reliable models of large-scale fracture networks, and borehole imaging gives the actual fracture description along the wells, which enables a reliable statistical determination of fracture attributes. Finally, these tools provide realistic pictures of fracture networks. They are applied successfully in numerous fractured-reservoir studies. The upscaling of fracture properties is the problem of translating the geological description of fracture networks into reservoir simulation parameters. Two approaches are possible. In the first one, the fractured reservoir is considered as a very heterogeneous matrix reservoir; therefore, one applies the classical techniques available for heterogeneous single-medium upscaling. The second approach is based on the dual-porosity concept and consists of upscaling the matrix and the fracture separately. Based on this second approach, methodologies and software were developed in the 1990s to calculate equivalent fracture parameters with respect to the dual-porosity concept (i.e., a fracture-permeability tensor with main flow directions and anisotropy and a shape factor that controls the matrix/fracture exchange kinetics3–5). For a given reservoir grid cell, the upscaling procedures consist of generating the corresponding 3D discrete fracture network and computing the equivalent parameters from this network. In particular, the permeability tensor is computed from the results of steady-state flow simulations in the discrete fracture network alone (without the matrix).


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faisal Al Jenaibi ◽  
Sebastien Lacroix ◽  
Said Meziani ◽  
Shams Udin Bughio ◽  
Ryadh Ben Salem ◽  
...  

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