Enhanced Gas Recovery: Factors Affecting Gas-Gas Displacement Efficiency

Author(s):  
S.S.K. Sim ◽  
A.T. Turta ◽  
A.K. Singhal ◽  
B.F. Hawkins
2009 ◽  
Vol 48 (08) ◽  
pp. 49-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.S.K. Sim ◽  
A.T. Turtata ◽  
A.K. Singhal ◽  
B.F. Hawkins

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-36
Author(s):  
Shuyang Liu ◽  
Ramesh Agarwal ◽  
Baojiang Sun

Abstract CO2 enhanced gas recovery (CO2-EGR) is a promising, environment-friendly technology with simultaneously sequestering CO2. The goals of this paper are to conduct simulations of CO2-EGR in both homogeneous and heterogeneous reservoirs to evaluate effects of gravity and reservoir heterogeneity, and to determine optimal CO2 injection time and injection rate for achieving better natural gas recovery by employing a genetic algorithm integrated with TOUGH2. The results show that gravity segregation retards upward migration of CO2 and promotes horizontal displacement efficiency, and the layers with low permeability in heterogeneous reservoir hinder the upward migration of CO2. The optimal injection time is determined as the depleted stage, and the corresponding injection rate is optimized. The optimal recovery factors are 62.83 % and 64.75 % in the homogeneous and heterogeneous reservoirs (804.76 m × 804.76 m × 45.72 m), enhancing production by 22.32 × 103 and 23.00 × 103 t of natural gas and storing 75.60 × 103 and 72.40 × 103 t CO2 with storage efficiencies of 70.55 % and 67.56 %, respectively. The cost/benefit analysis show that economic income of about 8.67 and 8.95 million USD can be obtained by CO2-EGR with optimized injection parameters respectively. This work could assist in determining optimal injection strategy and economic benefits for industrial scale gas reservoirs.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.T. Turta ◽  
S.S.K. Sim ◽  
A.K. Singhal ◽  
B.F. Hawkins

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