SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 3,
September 2012,
pp. 768-778
Summary
Streamline-based methods can be used as effective post-processing tools for
assessing flow patterns and well allocation factors in reservoir simulation.
This type of diagnostic information can be useful for a number of applications,
including visualization, model ranking, upscaling validation, and optimization
of well placement or injection allocation. In this paper, we investigate
finite-volume methods as an alternative to streamlines for obtaining flow
diagnostic information. Given a computed flux field, we solve the stationary
transport equations for tracer and time of flight by use of either single-point
upstream (SPU) weighting or a truly multidimensional upstream (MDU) weighting
scheme. We use tracer solutions to partition the reservoir into volumes
associated with injector/producer pairs and to calculate fluxes (well
allocation factors) associated with each volume. The heterogeneity of the
reservoir is assessed with time of flight to construct
flow-capacity/storage-capacity (F-vs.-Φ) diagrams that can be used to
estimate sweep efficiency. We compare the results of our approach with
streamline-based calculations for several numerical examples, and we
demonstrate that finite-volume methods are a viable alternative. The primary
advantages of finite volume methods are the applicability to unstructured grids
and the ease of implementation for general-purpose simulation formulations. The
main disadvantage is numerical diffusion, but we show that a MDU weighting
scheme is able to reduce these errors.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
29 June 2011
- Meeting paper published:
31 October 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
3 December 2011
- Manuscript approved:
15 December 2011
- Published online:
18 June 2012
- Version of record:
12 September 2012