SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 4,
December 2012,
pp. 1071-1083
Summary
The multiscale finite-volume (MSFV) method is designed to reduce the
computational cost of elliptic and parabolic problems with highly heterogeneous
anisotropic coefficients. The reduction is achieved by splitting the original
global problem into a set of local problems (with approximate local boundary
conditions) coupled by a coarse global problem. It has been shown recently that
the numerical errors in MSFV results can be reduced systematically with an
iterative procedure that provides a conservative velocity field after any
iteration step. The iterative MSFV (i-MSFV) method can be obtained with an
improved (smoothed) multiscale solution to enhance the localization conditions,
with a Krylov subspace method [e.g., the generalized-minimal-residual (GMRES)
algorithm] preconditioned by the MSFV system, or with a combination of both. In
a multiphase-flow system, a balance between accuracy and computational
efficiency should be achieved by finding a minimum number of i-MSFV iterations
(on pressure), which is necessary to achieve the desired accuracy in the
saturation solution. In this work, we extend the i-MSFV method to sequential
implicit simulation of time-dependent problems. To control the error of the
coupled saturation/pressure system, we analyze the transport error caused by an
approximate velocity field. We then propose an error-control strategy on the
basis of the residual of the pressure equation. At the beginning of simulation,
the pressure solution is iterated until a specified accuracy is achieved. To
minimize the number of iterations in a multiphase-flow problem, the solution at
the previous timestep is used to improve the localization assumption at the
current timestep. Additional iterations are used only when the residual becomes
larger than a specified threshold value. Numerical results show that only a few
iterations on average are necessary to improve the MSFV results significantly,
even for very challenging problems. Therefore, the proposed adaptive strategy
yields efficient and accurate simulation of multiphase flow in heterogeneous
porous media.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
13 May 2011
- Meeting paper published:
22 February 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
23 January 2012
- Manuscript approved:
19 April 2012
- Published online:
17 October 2012
- Version of record:
6 December 2012