Abstract

The technical and economic validities of the toe-to-heel air injection (THAI) process for heavy oils upgrading and production are yet to be fully realised even though it has been operated at laboratory, pilot, and semi-commercial levels. The findings from Canadian Kerrobert THAI project suggested that there is no proportionality between oil production and air injection rates. However, this conclusion was reached without having to dig deeper into the dynamics of the transport processes inside the reservoir especially that efficient combustion was clearly taking place as the mol% oxygen in the produced gas was negligible. As a result, this study is conducted with aims of identifying the similarities and differences of the dynamics of the transport processes in lab-scale and field-scale reservoirs. For the first time, this study has found oil drainage dynamics inside the reservoir to be both scale-dependent and operation-dependent. For the laboratory-scale numerical model E, what is clearest is that all of the head of the oil flux vectors are either totally vertically directed or slightly inclined and pointing upward towards the heel. None of them is pointing backward towards the toe of the HP well. Thus, it is apparent that oil drainage pattern in this laboratory-scale model E is efficient as all the mobilised upgraded oil, including from the base of the combustion cell, is produced as the combustion front advances in the toe-to-heel manner. However, the combustion front has a backward-leaning shape which is an indicator that it is propagating even inside the HP well. This implies that the process is operating in an unstable, inefficient, and unsafe mode. These two opposing patterns at laboratory-scale must be resolved to ensure healthy combustion front propagation with efficient oil drainage and production rates are achieved. At the field scale (i.e. model F), this study has shown for the first time that there are actually two mobile oil zones: the one ahead of the combustion front with lower oil flux magnitude (i.e. MOZ) and the one containing large pool of mobilised partially upgraded oil at the base of the reservoir just behind the toe of the HP well. The above findings in model F show that there is conflicting dynamics about the goal of achieving large oil production rates downstream of the combustion front with the propagation of forward-tilting stable, safe, and efficient combustion front. If the combustion is to be optimally sustained, then most of the mobilised upgraded oil might be lost going in the wrong direction towards the region behind the toe of the HP well. In actual reservoir in the field, shale with very low permeability and porosity must be present behind the toe in order for the large pool of mobilised upgraded oil that is continuously draining from the vertical adjacent planes to be forced into the toe of the HP well. As a result, to balance these two conflicting dynamics of upward-tilted combustion front going longitudinally towards the heel of the HP well and the mobilised oil draining down at an angle towards the region behind the toe of the HP well, future studies are essentially required. These are proposed and also listed under the conclusion section in order to ensure thorough design and operation procedures for the THAI process are established.

Highlights

  • No doubts that the world is transitioning to a decarbonised future even though no one knows how long it will take to reach there

  • After successfully developing kinetics upscaling procedure based on sound theoretical calculations and simulating the to-heel air injection (THAI) process at field scale, Rabiu Ado (2017) discovered that the dynamics of the processes in the reservoir are either (i) scale-dependent or (ii) that the validated laboratory-scale model showed that the process was operated in a pseudo-stable state or both

  • Given the field findings about the oil production rates in the THAI process being supposedly rather than justifiably low, it becomes apparent that the dynamics of the transport processes taking place inside the reservoir merit comprehensively detailed investigations

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Summary

Introduction

No doubts that the world is transitioning to a decarbonised future even though no one knows how long it will take to reach there. It could well be that the mobilised upgraded oil was continuously lost going in opposite direction away from the HP well and outside the pattern To test this supposition, numerical models at laboratory and field scales are conducted and two-dimensional profiles having oil flux vectors at reservoir condition superimposed on them are compared. The other aim is to propose solution strategies so that all the mobilised upgraded oil is captured and produced In this work, both the experimental-scale (from here onward called E) and field-scale (from here onward called F) numerical models are composed of Canadian Athabasca bitumen and reservoir properties. See the previous work of Rabiu Ado (2017)

Smaller dynamic grid blocks
Results and discussion
Conclusion

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