Abstract

Our paper presents an improved numerical scheme to simulate Single Well Chemical Tracer Test (SWCTT) method. SWCTT is mainly applied to determine the residual oil saturation of reservoirs. It consists in injecting an aqueous slug of a primary tracer into the reservoir formation and displacing it at a certain distance from the well. This tracer is partly miscible with oil on the one hand, and generates in situ a secondary tracer on the other hand. As a consequence, a shift is observed between the primary and the secondary tracers arrival times when production is resumed. This time shift is used to evaluate the residual oil saturation. In our paper, we propose a numerical scheme based on a fractional time stepping technique to decouple the resolution of the phases mass conservation equations and the chemical tracers mole conservation equations. For the phases resolution, we use an implicit scheme to ensure stability and robustness. For the chemical tracers, we propose an explicit second-order scheme in time and in space via MUSCL technique to improve the tracers time-shift calculation. The proposed numerical method is implemented on a realistic simulation model consisting of a vertical well crossing a reservoir consisting of a stack of homogeneous layers. By reducing the numerical dispersion, the proposed scheme improves the accuracy of predicted concentration profiles, without significantly increasing the computation time. Finally, the advantages of using a second-order scheme for residual oil saturation assessment are discussed on the basis of a radial 1D mesh convergence study.

Highlights

  • The Single Well Chemical Tracer Test (SWCTT) method has been the subject of longstanding patent of Harry Deans [1] on behalf of Esso and is detailed in [2]

  • The goal of this work is to propose an easy and fast to implement numerical scheme dedicated to the SWCTT method simulation only, with an improved accuracy compared to classical first-order upwind finite volume methods [12]

  • In order to improve the accuracy of the SWCTT method simulation, in particular the calculation of sharp concentration profiles, we propose the use of a second-order scheme in time and space

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Summary

Introduction

The Single Well Chemical Tracer Test (SWCTT) method has been the subject of longstanding patent of Harry Deans [1] on behalf of Esso and is detailed in [2]. Main application of the SWCTT method is the determination of the residual oil saturation of a reservoir formation after a secondary or tertiary waterflooding process This measurement is essential for assessing the process effectiveness under conditions as representative as possible, i.e. on a large reservoir rock volume of 10–20 feet around the test wells. The SWCTT method consists of injecting an aqueous slug of a reactive tracer and pushing it by water at a certain distance, currently a few meters, from the well. This tracer is called the primary tracer. One may refer to the comprehensive framework proposed by Khaledialidusti and Kleppe [3] to get an insight of SWCTT stages and design parameters

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