SPE Journal
Volume 14,
Number 3,
September 2009,
pp. 431-440
Summary
Thermodynamic equilibrium calculations in compositional flow simulators are
used to find the partitioning of components among fluid phases, and they can be
a time consuming kernel in a compositional flow simulation. We describe a
tie-line-based compositional space parameterization (CSP) approach for dealing
with immiscible gas-injection processes with large numbers of components. The
multicomponent multiphase equilibrium problem is recast in terms of this
parameterized compositional space, in which the solution path can be
represented in a concise manner. This tie-line-based parameterization approach
is used to speed up the phase behavior calculations of standard compositional
simulation. Two schemes are employed. In the first method, the parameterization
of the phase behavior is computed in a preprocessing step, and the results are
stored in a table. During the course of a simulation, the flash calculation
procedure is replaced by the solution of a multidimensional optimization
problem in terms of the parameterized space. For processes where significant
changes in pressure and temperature take place, this optimization procedure is
combined with linear interpolation in tie-line space. In the second method,
compositional space adaptive tabulation (CSAT) is used to accelerate the
equation of state (EOS) computations associated with standard compositional
reservoir simulation. The CSAT strategy takes advantage of the fact that, in
gas injection processes, the solution path involves a limited number of
tie-lines. The adaptively collected tie-lines are used to avoid redundant
phase-stability checks in the course of a flow simulation. Specifically, we
check if a given composition belongs to one of the tie-lines (or its extension)
already in the table. If not, a new tie-line is computed and added to the
table. The CSAT technique was implemented in a general-purpose research
simulator (GPRS), which is designed for compositional flow simulation on
unstructured grids. Using a variety of challenging models, we show that, for
immiscible compositional processes, CSAT leads to significant speed up (at
least a several-fold improvement) of the EoS calculations compared with
standard techniques.
© 2009. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
1,003 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
13 December 2006
- Meeting paper published:
26 February 2007
- Revised manuscript received:
18 August 2008
- Manuscript approved:
21 August 2008
- Published online:
13 August 2009
- Version of record:
28 September 2009