SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 16, Number 1, February 2013, pp. 85-96

SPE-159557-PA

Investigation of Anisotropic Mixing in Miscible Displacements

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DOI  More information 10.2118/159557-PA http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/159557-PA

Citation

  • Adepoju, O.O., Lake, L.W., and Johns, R.T. 2013. Investigation of Anisotropic Mixing in Miscible Displacements. SPE Res Eval & Eng 16 (1): 85-96. SPE-159557-PA. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/159557-PA.

Summary

Dispersion (or local mixing) degrades miscibility in miscible flood displacements by interfering with the transfer of intermediate components that develop miscibility. Dispersion, however, also can improve oil recovery by increasing sweep efficiency. Either way, dispersion is an important factor in understanding miscible-flood performance. This paper investigates longitudinal and transverse local mixing in a finite-difference compositional simulator at different scales (both fine and coarse scale) using a 2D convection-dispersion model. All simulations were of constant-mobility and -density, first-contact miscible flow. The model allows for variations of velocity in both directions. We analyzed local (gridblock) concentration profiles for various miscible-displacement models with different scales of heterogeneity and permeability autocorrelation lengths. To infer dispersivity, we fitted an analytical 2D convection-dispersion model to the local concentration profile to determine local longitudinal and transverse dispersivities simultaneously. Streamlines of simulation models were traced using the algorithm proposed by Pollock (1988). To our knowledge, this is the first systematic attempt to numerically study local transverse dispersivity. The results show that transverse mixing, which is usually neglected in the 1D convection-dispersion model of dispersion, is significant when the flow direction changes locally as a result of heterogeneity. The computed streamlines, which highlight the variation in flow directions, agree with the computed transverse dispersivity trends. We find that both transverse and longitudinal dispersion can grow with travel distance and that there are several instances in which transverse dispersion is the larger of the two. Often, the variations in the streamlines are suppressed (homogenized) during upscaling. This paper gives a quantitative and systematic procedure to estimate the degree of transverse mixing (dispersivity) in any model. We conclude that local mixing, including transverse mixing, should be considered when upscaling a fine-scale model for miscible displacement to ensure proper preservation of fine-scale sweep and displacement efficiency and ultimate oil recovery for miscible-displacement simulations.

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History

  • Original manuscript received: 5 June 2012
  • Meeting paper published: 8 October 2012
  • Revised manuscript received: 31 October 2012
  • Manuscript approved: 20 December 2012
  • Published online: 31 January 2013
  • Version of record: 27 February 2013