Abstract

Gas injection processes are among the effective methods for enhanced oil recovery. Miscible and/or near miscible gas injection processes are among the most widely used enhanced oil recovery techniques. The successful design and implementation of a miscible gas injection project are dependent upon the accurate determination of minimum miscibility pressure (MMP), the pressure above which the displacement process becomes multiple-contact miscible. This paper presents a method to get the characteristic curve of multiple-contact. The curve can illustrate the character in the miscible and/or near miscible gas injection processes. Based on the curve, we suggest a new model to make an accurate prediction for CO2-oil MMP. Unlike the method of characteristic (MOC) theory and the mixing-cell method, which have to find the key tie lines, our method removes the need to locate the key tie lines that in many cases is hard to find a unique set. Moreover, unlike the traditional correlation, our method considers the influence of multiple-contact. The new model combines the multiple-contact process with the main factors (reservoir temperature, oil composition) affecting CO2-oil MMP. This makes it is more practical than the MOC and mixing-cell method, and more accurate than traditional correlation. The method proposed in this paper is used to predict CO2-oil MMP of 5 samples of crude oil in China. The samples come from different oil fields, and the injected gas is pure CO2. The prediction results show that, compared with the slim-tube experiment method, the prediction error of this method for CO2-oil MMP is within 2%.

Highlights

  • Gas injection processes are among the effective methods for enhanced oil recovery [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Compared to the result of slim-tube, we find for most of the case, as the pressure reaches minimum miscibility pressure (MMP), the minimum value of characteristic curve is below 0.23, and there is a change in a small scope (0.23-0.13)

  • We make a comparison between our method of characteristic curve and the MOC method of characteristics [27]

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Summary

A New Predictive Method for CO2-Oil Minimum Miscibility Pressure

Received 29 September 2020; Revised 10 November 2020; Accepted 21 December 2020; Published 5 January 2021. Gas injection processes are among the effective methods for enhanced oil recovery. Miscible and/or near miscible gas injection processes are among the most widely used enhanced oil recovery techniques. This paper presents a method to get the characteristic curve of multiple-contact. The curve can illustrate the character in the miscible and/or near miscible gas injection processes. We suggest a new model to make an accurate prediction for CO2-oil MMP. The new model combines the multiple-contact process with the main factors (reservoir temperature, oil composition) affecting CO2-oil MMP. This makes it is more practical than the MOC and mixing-cell method, and more accurate than traditional correlation. The prediction results show that, compared with the slim-tube experiment method, the prediction error of this method for CO2-oil MMP is within 2%

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