Abstract

The occurrence of fluid flow near a wellhead is the major concern of the petroleum industry, as pressure drop, loss of formation, and other variables of interest are mostly affected in this region. The fluid flows from the hydrocarbon reservoir to the wellbore can be characterized as laminar to turbulent; thus, it is important to model this phenomenon with the integrated wellbore-reservoir model. Using 3D Navier–Stokes equations, an integrated wellbore-reservoir model is created in this study, and it incorporates the formation damage zone. For the porous-porous and porous-fluid interfaces, the General Grid Interface (GGI) approach is applied in conjunction with the conservative mass flux interface model. Model equations are solved using a velocity-pressure coupling solver that is pressure-based. For reliable and quick results, the system of equations is solved using an algebraic multigrid approach. The pressure diffusivity equation’s analytical solution under steady-state flow circumstances is used to validate the model. The integrated wellbore-reservoir model is applied to different reservoir scenarios, for example, different production rates, formation zones, and reservoir formation conditions. The results indicate that the present Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) model can be extended to simulate the real field scale model. integrated wellbore-reservoir modeling based on 3D Navier–Stokes equations with efficient computational techniques can lead the field of petroleum industries to advance current knowledge.

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