Abstract

During the operation of underground water-sealed oil storage caverns, a large amount of oil vapor is generated due to volatilization. Oil vapor can easily leak into the surrounding rock, and fractures in the surrounding rock are usually the dominant channels for oil vapor leakage. To study the influence of fractures on oil vapor leakage and migration in underground water-sealed oil storage caverns during the oil storage period, a gas–liquid two-phase flow model of the fracture–pore dual medium in fractured rock mass was established. The program was implemented on the COMSOL platform by using weak-form PDE (partial differential equation). Then, taking an underground water-sealed cavern of an oil reserve as an example, the influence of the characteristic parameters of a single fracture on the evolution process of oil vapor leakage and migration during the oil storage period of the underground water-sealed oil storage cavern was studied. The results were further applied to the Huangdao underground oil depot project. The results show that the spatial distribution of oil vapor leakage is mainly affected by fractures. Through parameter sensitivity analysis, it was found that the geometric characteristic parameters of fractures will have a certain impact on the migration field of oil vapor leakage in underground caverns. Specifically, fracture permeability (kf), fracture width (df), and fracture inclination (θ) are positively correlated with oil vapor leakage parameters (oil vapor leakage range and leakage volume), while the distance between the fracture and the middle cavern (s) is negatively correlated with oil vapor leakage parameters (oil vapor leakage range and leakage volume). The relative influence of fracture geometry parameters on the migration process of oil vapor leakage during the oil storage period of the underground water-sealed oil storage cavern is in the following order: kf> df> s > θ. Engineering application shows that the existence of fractures affects the spatial distribution of oil vapor leakage and migration, and the relationship between oil vapor leakage parameters and oil storage operation time is a positive power function. The gas–liquid two-phase flow model of the fracture–pore dual medium in fractured rock mass developed in this study could offer a numerical simulation tool to assess and mitigate the risk of oil vapor leakage. The research conclusions can provide some references for related problems encountered in similar projects.

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