SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 13,
Number 5,
October 2010,
pp. 747-763
Summary
Inaccurate modeling of reservoir mixing by using large grid blocks in
compositional simulation can significantly affect recoveries in miscible gas
floods and lead to inaccurate predictions of recovery performance. Reservoir
mixing or dispersion is caused by diffusion of particles across streamlines;
mixing can be significantly enhanced if the surface area of contact between the
reservoir and injected fluid are increased as fluids propagate through the
reservoir. A common way to convert geological models into simulation models is
to upscale permeabilities based on reservoir heterogeneity. Upscaling affects
the degree of mixing that is modeled, but the importance of reservoir mixing in
upscaling is largely ignored. This paper shows how to estimate the level of
mixing in a reservoir and how to incorporate mixing into the upscaling
procedure.
We derive the key scaling groups for first-contact miscible (FCM) flow and
show how they impact reservoir mixing. Heterogeneities are assumed to dominate
the flow regime so that gravity effects are negligible. We examine only local
mixing, not apparent mixing caused by variations in streamline path lengths
(convective spreading). Local mixing is important because it affects the
strength of the injected fluid, and can cause an otherwise multicontact
miscible (MCM) flood to become immiscible. Over 1000 2-D numerical simulations
are carried out using experimental design to estimate dispersivity as a
function of the derived scaling groups.
We show that reservoir mixing is enhanced owing to fluid propagation through
heterogeneous media. Because mixing is dependent on heterogeneities, upscaling
is an iterative process where the level of mixing in both the longitudinal and
transverse directions must be matched from the fine to coarse scale. The most
important groups that affect mixing are the mobility ratio, dispersion number,
correlation lengths, and the Dykstra-Parson's coefficient. Large dispersion
numbers yield greater dispersivities away from the injection well. We show
through simulations of both FCM and multi-contact miscible (MCM) floods that
grid-block size can be significantly increased when reservoir mixing is large.
Heterogeneous reservoirs with large longitudinal correlation lengths can be
upscaled to larger grid blocks than reservoirs with random permeability fields.
This paper shows how to determine a priori the maximum grid-block size
allowed in both the x- and z-directions to predict accurately the
oil recovery from miscible gas floods.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
29 June 2009
- Meeting paper published:
5 October 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
3 July 2010
- Manuscript approved:
13 July 2010
- Published online:
12 October 2010
- Version of record:
27 October 2010