Abstract

Abstract A rapid, accurate method for predicting the dew points of gas condensate systems and their points of gas condensate systems and their subsequent normal and retrograde phase behavior with pressure decline has been developed. The method predicts dewpoint pressure, volume percent liquid, condensate content of produced gas, and the liquid and gas compositions at pressures below the dewpoint pressure. Use of a modified form of the BWR equation of state, which was established by regression calculations on experimental data from several gas condensate, provides depletion behavior predictions that are significantly improved over predictions that are significantly improved over predictions using K-values based on convergence predictions using K-values based on convergence pressures and Standing's correlation for density. Introduction Prediction of complex hydrocarbon-mixture thermodynamics is fundamental to reservoir and gas precess engineering. In particular, accurate precess engineering. In particular, accurate descriptions of phase behavior are needed to plan production operations for gas-condensate reservoirs. production operations for gas-condensate reservoirs. Although analysis of reservoir behavior during producing and cycling operations can be made for producing and cycling operations can be made for simple reservoir models, extensions of these studies to more complex reservoir systems are still difficult, both with regard to numerical techniques and the phase behavior of the fluids. This report presents phase behavior of the fluids. This report presents a mathematical method for handling the complex phase relationships encountered in retrograde phase relationships encountered in retrograde condensates; it represents an advance in reservoir behavior technology in that it will aid the development of closed-form mathematical representations of total production systems. A typical phase diagram for a complex hydrocarbon mixture is shown in Fig. 1. When the reservoir temperature Tr is higher than the critical temperature Tc and lower than the critical-condensation temperature Tct, the mixture is a gas condensate. Decreasing the pressure on a condensate while maintaining nearly constant temperature will result in two phases forming at the dew point. Further decrease in pressure will cause additional liquids to be formed. This phenomenon is called retrograde condensation. As pressure continues to decrease, normal phase behavior regions are encountered (liquid vaporizes as the pressure decreases) until the low-pressure dew point is encountered. When a gas-condensate reservoir is produced, gas is withdrawn and the volume of fluids in the reservoir remains nearly constant as the pressure declines. heavier components tend to accumulate in the liquid phase as a result of retrograde condensation, while lighter components tend to concentrate in the vapor phase.

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