SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 3,
September 2012,
pp. 817-827
Summary
Reservoir souring refers to the onset of hydrogen sulfide (H2S)
production during waterflooding. Besides health and safety issues,
H2S content reduces the value of the produced hydrocarbon. Nitrate
injection is an effective method to prevent the formation of H2S.
Designing this process requires the modeling of a complicated set of
biogeochemical reactions involved in the production of H2S and its
inhibition. This paper describes the modeling and simulation of biological
reactions associated with the injection of nitrate to inhibit reservoir
souring. The model is implemented in a general-purpose adaptive reservoir
simulator (GPAS). To the best of our knowledge, GPAS is the first field-scale
reservoir simulator that models reservoir-souring treatment.
The basic mechanism in the biologically mediated generation of
H2S is the reaction between sulfate in the injection water and fatty
acids in the formation water in the presence of sulfate-reducing bacteria
(SRB). There are proposed mechanisms that describe the effect of nitrate
injection on souring remediation. Depending on the circumstances, more than one
mechanism may occur at the same time. These mechanisms include the inhibitory
effect of nitrite on sulfate reduction, the competition between SRB and
nitrate-reducing bacteria (NRB), and the stimulation of nitrate-reducing
sulfide-oxidizing bacteria (NR-SOB). For each mechanism, we specify the
biological species and chemical components involved and determine the role of
each component in the biological reaction. For every biological reaction, a set
of ordinary-differential equations along with differential equations for the
transport of chemical and biological species are solved.
The results of reported experiments in the literature are used to find the
input parameters for field-scale simulations. This reservoir simulator can then
predict the onset of reservoir souring and the effectiveness of nitrate
injection and helps in the design of the process. The comprehensive modeling
accounts for variation in biological-system characteristics and reservoir
conditions that affect the production and remediation of H2S.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
5 June 2011
- Meeting paper published:
12 April 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
22 November 2011
- Manuscript approved:
29 November 2011
- Published online:
29 August 2012
- Version of record:
12 September 2012