SPE Journal
Volume 16,
Number 4,
December 2011,
pp. 751-767
Summary
CO2 floods at temperatures typically below 120°F can involve
complex phase behavior, where a third CO2-rich liquid
(L2) phase coexists with the oleic (L1) and
gaseous (V) phases. Results of slim-tube measurements in the literature
show that an oil displacement by CO2 can achieve high displacement
efficiency of more than 90% when three hydrocarbon phases coexist during the
displacement. However, the mechanism for the high-displacement efficiency is
uncertain because the complex interaction of phase behavior with flow during
the displacement is not fully understood.
In this paper, we present the first detailed study of three-phase behavior
predictions and displacement efficiency for low-temperature CO2
floods. Four-component EOS models are initially used to investigate
systematically the effects of pressure, temperature, and oil properties on
development of three-phase regions and displacement efficiency. Multicomponent
oil displacements by CO2 are then considered. We use a compositional
reservoir simulator capable of robust three-phase equilibrium calculations.
Results show that high displacement efficiency of low-temperature
CO2 floods is a consequence of both condensing and vaporizing
behavior. The L2 phase serves as a buffer between the
immiscible V and L1 phases within the three-phase
region. Components in the L1 phase first transfer efficiently
to the L2 phase near a lower critical endpoint (LCEP). These
oil components then transfer to the V phase near an upper critical
endpoint (UCEP) at the trailing edge of the three-phase region. The CEPs are
defined where two of the three coexisting phases merge in the presence of the
other immiscible phase. Unlike two-phase displacements, condensation and
vaporization of intermediate components occur simultaneously within the
three-phase region. The simultaneous condensing/vaporizing behavior involving
the CEPs is also confirmed for simulations of several west Texas oil
displacements. Quaternary fluid models can predict qualitatively the complex
displacements because four is the minimum number of components to develop CEP
behavior in composition space at a fixed temperature and pressure.
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
28 June 2010
- Meeting paper published:
25 April 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
23 November 2010
- Manuscript approved:
28 January 2011
- Published online:
28 June 2011
- Version of record:
23 December 2011