SPE Journal
Volume 14,
Number 1,
March 2009,
pp. 95-100
Summary
Previous studies dedicated to the analysis of retrograde condensation in
naturally fractured gas/condensate reservoirs have concluded that the presence
of a multimechanistic-flow environment in tight naturally fractured reservoirs
hosting retrograde gases can have a great effect on the depletion behavior of
the reservoirs (Ayala et al. 2004; Ayala et al. 2006; Ayala et al. 2007). In
these systems, condensate dropout below dewpoint conditions is typically
immobile and greatly impairs the flow of the other phases, adversely affecting
reservoir productivity and ultimate recovery. Whenever this flow impairment
becomes severe, diffusion can take over as the main recovery mechanism. In such
cases, fluid recovery is driven by both molecular-concentration fields (i.e.,
diffusive transport governed by Fick's law of diffusion) and the pressure field
(i.e., bulk transport governed by Darcy's law). Previous multimechanistic
studies relied upon the assumption that the diffusive flow component could be
represented as a constant value throughout the reservoir’s productive life.
However, diffusion coefficients in hydrocarbon systems can be shown to vary
significantly during the reservoir’s producing life as a function of prevailing
pressure, temperature, and composition conditions. The present study captures
the influence that varying composition and fluid properties, such as density
and viscosity, have on the value of the diffusion coefficient at different
stages of reservoir depletion. It is concluded that the assumption of constant
diffusive coefficients can yield good predictions for cases where
fracture-depletion rates are small in particular. Diffusion coefficients and
diffusive effects are also shown to exhibit a strong dependency on
fracture-depletion rates. The present work reassesses the effect of
multimechanistic flow on the isothermal depletion of tight, naturally fractured
retrograde-gas reservoirs while capturing the full dependencies of the
diffusion coefficient on reservoir fluid properties and their interplay with
the formation of the condensate bank around matrix edges.
© 2009. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
31 January 2007
- Meeting paper published:
15 April 2007
- Revised manuscript received:
3 March 2008
- Manuscript approved:
5 March 2008
- Published online:
16 March 2009
- Version of record:
1 March 2009