Abstract

Abstract This study assesses how zone-by-zone completion strategy which including top-down & bottom-up mechanisms affect the performance of the double displacement process (DDP) and water alternating gas (WAG) up-dip and down-dip. It further seeks to develop an optimal zone-by-zone completion strategy to overcome the gas override problem and increase oil recovery in a dipping stratified reservoir. The impact of connection transmissibility on completion strategies in a dipping stratified reservoir is also investigated. The research was conducted on a stratified block model reservoir with dimension 4000 m × 1000 m × 80 m and is divided into four main reservoir zones in Z direction. Zones are separated from each other by a thin shale bed with thickness of 0.2 m. The communication between reservoir zones and shale beds have level of 0, 0.1, 0.01 relating to completely sealing shale, leaky shale and completely open shale. Well completion strategies simulated included all zones injecting and producing, top-down and bottom-up. The simulation begins with waterflooding to obtain 95% water cut, then the performance of DDP, WAG up-dip, and WAG down-dip with the various completion strategies were simulated. The results prove that zone-by-zone completion strategy is a successful way to overcome gas override and improve vertical conformance with WAG injection in a stratified reservoir to maximize oil recovery from the offshore field in East Canada. With zone-by-zone completion strategy, the recovery factor of WAG up-dip increased 0.8% more than the all-zone injecting and producing scheme. The results also identified bottom-up was effective completion strategy for WAG up-dip in stratified reservoirs without zonal communication and top-down was a successful completion strategy for communicating stratified reservoirs with 0.01 level of connection transmissibility with WAG up-dip and without zonal communication with WAG down-dip. DDP and WAG are considered as potentially effective enhanced oil recovery methods for offshore reservoir. However, most of studies be conducted on laboratory and reservoir simulation scale, and focus on operation parameters such as WAG ratio, WAG cycle, slug size. Our understanding is that this is the first study on the effect of top-down and bottom-up completion strategies to the performance of DDP and WAG in pilot stage on a dipping stratified reservoir block model.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call