SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 4,
December 2012,
pp. 1246-1254
Summary
Thermal stimulation of bitumen in oil-sands reservoirs is a critical
requirement for the success of steam-based recovery processes such as
steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD). If the bitumen is not heated, it
remains at its original viscosity, often in the millions of centipoise and,
thus, is not mobilized so that it cannot be moved to a production well. All
oil-sands reservoirs are heterogeneous, both with respect to geology and fluid
composition, and, thus, conformance of steam in the reservoir is not uniform.
At present, real-time monitoring of the steam-conformance zone in the reservoir
is not possible, and, thus, the spatial distribution of heat delivery to the
reservoir is uncertain. In this research, a new method for detecting
heterogeneity and monitoring steam chambers has been developed and tested by
detailed thermal/acoustic reservoir simulation. Here, a thermal fluid-flow
simulator was one-way coupled to a wave-propagation simulator (information
passed is density alone) to evaluate the potential of identifying rock and
fluid discontinuities during a SAGD operation with coded white-noise-reflection
processes. Digital communication systems use coded white-noise processes to
make advantageous use of unexpected reflections from environmental
heterogeneities. The proposed theory and subsequent simulations reveal that it
is possible to resolve the edge of the SAGD steam chamber and to image the
heterogeneity within the reservoir as it evolves with white-noise-reflection
methods. The properties of the signals described provide an opportunity for
property detection at lower power levels and higher frequencies than
traditional seismic methods. Furthermore, the signals are such that the noise
from recovery processes and the native reservoir environment do not interfere
with the detection methods, allowing for the monitoring method to be used
concurrently with the recovery process.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
19 January 2011
- Meeting paper published:
19 October 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
22 March 2012
- Manuscript approved:
13 April 2012
- Published online:
27 November 2012
- Version of record:
6 December 2012