Abstract

With further progress of Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) technology, a growing number of oil sands or heavy oil reservoirs were put into production in an efficient way. However, owing to the existence of muddy laminae within reservoirs, there are challenges associated with the expansion of the steam chamber and oil drainage during the SAGD process. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the adverse impact of muddy laminae on conventional SAGD performance and introduce an improvement strategy with multilateral well patterns to reduce the adverse impact and improve the performance. In the research reported here, the reservoir numerical simulation approach is applied to conduct the research. The analysis conducted on a prototypical reservoir reveals that the steam chamber may expand slowly in some sections due to the poor capacity of heat and mass transfer, and the expansion of the steam chamber is relatively uneven along the wellbore, when the muddy laminae are existing in the formation. The influence level of the muddy laminae on conventional SAGD performance under different distribution modes is different, but the adverse effect is mainly reflected in the delay of peak oil production, the decrease in peak oil production, the decrease in steam chamber volume, and the increase in the cumulative steam oil ratio (mainly in early and middle stages of the SAGD process). On the basis of aforementioned researches, the improvement strategy with two different multilateral well patterns, planar multilateral well and upward multilateral well, is introduced to improve the SAGD performance. The results indicate that the combination of a planar multilateral injector and planar multilateral producer has the best performance. By adopting such kind of combination, the recovery factor can be increased from 31.36% to 47.08%, and the cumulative steam oil ratio can be decreased from 5.29 m3/m3 to 4.64 m3/m3 under the combined distribution mode of muddy laminae. It can be known that the branches of the planar multilateral well are very helpful for the expansion of the steam chamber and oil drainage, once the heat connection between branches of the injector and producer is well established. Overall results show that the multilateral well pattern is promising for SAGD applications at oil sands or heavy oil reservoirs which are rich in muddy laminae.

Highlights

  • Oil sands or heavy oil reservoirs are considered to be the important part of unconventional resources [1,2,3]

  • When the muddy laminae are distributed above the injector, the muddy laminae hinder the upward migration of steam and the drainage of crude oil, as soon as the production stage of the Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) process starts; compared with the first mode, the development of the steam chamber is worse

  • The influence level of the muddy laminae on conventional SAGD performance under different distribution modes is different, but the adverse effect is mainly reflected in the delay of peak oil production, the decrease in peak oil production, the decrease in steam chamber volume, and the increase in the cumulative steam oil ratio

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Summary

Introduction

Oil sands or heavy oil reservoirs are considered to be the important part of unconventional resources [1,2,3]. SAGD technology is widely used in the recovery process of aforementioned resources [4,5,6,7,8]. Over the past few years, SAGD technology has achieved great success in several large-scale commercial projects all over the world, such as Mackay River oil sands in Canada or Shuguang SAGD project of the Liaohe oilfield in China [9, 10]. The existence of barriers may affect the expansion of the steam chamber and the recovery performance during the SAGD process.

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