Abstract

Main parts of oil and gas reserves are stored in fractured reservoirs. Simulation of multiphase flow in fractured reservoirs requires a large amount of calculations due to the complexity, reservoir scale and heterogeneity of the rock properties. The accuracy and speed of the streamline method for simulating hydrocarbon reservoirs at field scale make it more applicable than conventional Eulerian simulators using finite difference and finite element techniques. Conventional simulators for fractured reservoirs consume a great deal of time and expense and require powerful CPUs like supercomputers. This makes the development of a fast, powerful and precise simulation method of great importance. The present study was undertaken to develop a computational code as a streamline simulator to study waterflooding in a two-dimensional fractured reservoir with heterogeneous permeability using the Dual Porosity-Single Permeability (DPSP) model. In this simulator, the pressure equation is solved implicitly over an Eulerian grid and then the streamlines are generated using Pollock's semi-analytical method and are traced. At this point, the Time-Of-Flight (TOF) is developed and the saturation equations are mapped and solved explicitly along the streamlines. Next, the results are transferred back onto the Eulerian grid and the calculations are repeated until the simulation end time. In fractured reservoirs, the interaction between the matrix and fracture is included in the transfer functions. Transfer functions model fluid flow and production mechanisms between the matrix and fracture. They introduce source/sink equations between the matrix and fracture and they are distributed throughout the media. In the current study, a problem is simulated using streamline method and several important transfer functions. A new linear transfer function with a constant coefficient is introduced that is based on differences in water saturation between the matrix and fracture. The simulation results were then compared and a commercial software is applied to solve the same problem. The results of the streamline simulator were compared with those of the commercial software and showed appropriate accuracy for the newly introduced transfer function. The accuracy and efficiency of the streamline simulator for simulation of two-phase flow in fractured reservoirs using different transfer functions are confirmed and the results are verified.

Highlights

  • Simulation of fluid flow in porous media in order to improve oil production from hydrocarbon reservoirs is vital

  • The results of the simulation studies and comparison of different transfer functions are summarized

  • The oil flow rate and cumulative volume of oil produced by the production wells using different transfer functions are represented

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Simulation of fluid flow in porous media in order to improve oil production from hydrocarbon reservoirs is vital. A larger total timestep size can be chosen to reduce the number of pressure solution updates and increase the simulation speed The increase in the speed of streamline method derives mainly from avoidance of the updating of the pressure field according to changes in the level of saturation. Another factor that increases the simulation speed is that every streamline is calculated separately, independent of other streamlines, with its own timestep size (Dtsl).

Governing equations for two-phase flow in porous media
Matrix-fracture transfer functions
F Km lwf lom lwf þ lom cm: ð19Þ
Proposed linear transfer function with constant coefficient
Problem definition
Results and discussion
Conclusion
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