Abstract

Viscosity reduction through heat transport from steam to bitumen is one of the most important recovery mechanisms of a steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) process. Both heat convection and conduction contribute to the heat transport. Although conduction is considered as dominant through most of a SAGD process, an understanding of heat convection, especially accurate modeling of a condensate convection velocity, is still limited in the literature. This paper develops a mathematical model for the transient heat transfer beyond a steam chamber boundary in SAGD. A convection velocity is clearly formulated, which requires the coupling of heat transport and pressure diffusion. Calculation results show that in SAGD, convection plays a minor role than conduction. In addition, the relative contribution of convection can be influenced by reservoir formation compressibility, steam chamber boundary advancing velocity, and particularly by a difference between steam injection pressure and reservoir initial pressure. Correlations are regressed to estimate the relative contribution of heat convection (ratio) in the overall heat transfer process during a stabilized production period of SAGD.

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