SPE Journal
Volume 16,
Number 1,
March 2011,
pp. 55-64
Summary
Expanding-solvent steam-assisted gravity drainage (ES-SAGD) is an in-situ
steam/solvent recovery process to produce heavy oil and bitumen from oil-sands
reservoirs. In ES-SAGD, steam and solvent are injected into the depletion
chamber within the reservoir. At the chamber edge, the steam releases its
latent heat, heating the oil there, and solvent mixes with mobilized bitumen,
which then flows under gravity to the lower horizontal producer. Many factors
influence the efficiency and rate at which oil is mobilized. One of them is the
stability of the steam/oil interface, which is controlled by the concentration
and temperature dependencies of viscosity and density and the relative
magnitudes of viscous, gravity (buoyancy), and capillary forces. In this
research, the stability of the chamber interface between the vapor chamber and
the bitumen at the edge of the chamber is examined. We present theoretical
evidence for occurrence of such instability and conditions at which the
interface is unstable. The results demonstrate that steam/solvent injection
enhances the instability of the interface, thus promoting greater mixing at the
edge of the chamber. Consequently, the oil rate of a steam/solvent process is
higher than that of a steam-only process. Therefore, there are three
fundamental contributions to enhanced production by solvent/steam processes.
First, the oil-phase viscosity is lowered. Second, the oil saturation is
enhanced at the edge of the chamber. And third, the vapor/oil interface becomes
more unstable, which promotes more mixing at the chamber edge. The stability of
the interface is also controlled by the balance between the solvent's
solubility in the oil phase and the ability of the solvent to reduce the
viscosity of the oil phase. The results of the stability analysis confirm the
findings of laboratory experiments and field tests, which demonstrate that
processes that use solvent/steam yield higher production rates than those that
use steam alone. The analysis also reveals that there is an intermediate
solvent between the lightest and heaviest ones where the instability is
maximized, which further explains peak oil rates for intermediate solvents
obtained from steam/solvent experiments (Nasr and Isaacs 2001).
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
1 March 2010
- Meeting paper published:
25 April 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
6 May 2010
- Manuscript approved:
29 June 2010
- Published online:
11 November 2010
- Version of record:
15 March 2011