Abstract

In reservoir simulation, the fluid composition is usually assumed uniform for the whole reservoir, while in many reservoirs, oil and gas composition changes with depth. This phenomenon which is known as compositional grading could be significant in heavy and super heavy oil reservoirs. In these reservoirs, biodegradation and asphaltene precipitation are considered as the main reasons behind this phenomenon. Compositional grading in heavy oil reservoirs could affect fluid viscosity and vaporizing–condensing mechanism in steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) operations. In this paper, through a simulation study, one of the Iranian heavy oil reservoirs which have a significant compositional grading was selected to investigate the effect of compositional grading on the performance of simulated SAGD method. The reservoir is a fractured carbonate reservoir, and its compositional grading is maintained because of the lack of convection inside the reservoir. To verify the importance of compositional grading, the performance results of the SAGD method for compositional grading case were compared with that of uniform composition case. The result showed that ignoring compositional grading would lead to underestimation of ultimate recovery in the fractured model. The study of SAGD process in a non-fractured reservoir model showed that considering compositional grading has an insignificant effect on SAGD performance.

Highlights

  • The compositional grading is a phenomenon that could be observed in many of the world’s hydrocarbon reservoirs (Firoozabadi 1999)

  • Contradictory simulation results reported by different researchers indicate that further investigation is required to evaluate the effect of oil viscosity gradient on steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) performance in heavy oil sand reservoirs

  • The effect of compositional grading on SAGD performance in fractured and non-fractured models was investigated by comparing the efficiency of the SAGD method for uniform and non-uniform composition

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Summary

Introduction

The compositional grading is a phenomenon that could be observed in many of the world’s hydrocarbon reservoirs (Firoozabadi 1999). An example is a North African field in which strong grading in stock-tank oil gravity and a related variation in reservoir oil viscosity have been observed (Hirschberg 1988) Biodegradation is another important factor in the formation of the compositional grading in heavy oil reservoirs. Through a simulation study, Ghasemi and Whitson (2015) investigated the effect of vaporizing–condensing mechanism on SAGD performance for different oil compositions with API gravity. The effect of oil viscosity gradient on the performance of the SAGD process in heavy oil sand reservoirs has been studied by various researchers but different results obtained. Contradictory simulation results reported by different researchers indicate that further investigation is required to evaluate the effect of oil viscosity gradient on SAGD performance in heavy oil sand reservoirs. The main purpose of this study is to investigate this issue

Reservoir parameters
The reservoir compositional grading
Effect of compositional grading on SAGD performance
Conclusions
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