SPE Journal
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Summary
For compositional transient simulations including compositional reservoir
simulations, phase-equilibrium calculation, often formulated as a flash
problem, can be time consuming. It is therefore important to speed up the
calculation of phase equilibrium to improve the efficiency of the simulator.
The reduced-variables methods, or the reduction methods, reformulate the
original phase equilibrium problem with a smaller set of independent variables.
Various versions of the reduced-variables methods have been proposed since the
mid-1980s. The methods were first proposed for cubic equations of state (EOSs)
with zero binary interaction parameters (BIPs) and later generalized to
situations with nonzero-BIP matrices. Most of the studies in the last decade
suggest that the reduced-variables methods are much more efficient than the
conventional flash method. However, Haugen and Beckner (2011) questioned the
advantages of the reduced-variables methods in their recent paper. A fair
comparison between the reduced-variables-based flash and the conventional flash
is not straightforward because it is difficult to formulate the former as
unconstrained minimization problems, and the flash calculation time is also
related to the implementation quality. With the recent formulations by Nichita
and Graciaa (2011), it is possible to code the reduced-variables methods
without extensive modifications of Michelsen's conventional flash algorithm. A
minimization-based reduced-variables algorithm was coded and compared with the
conventional minimization-based flash. A test with the use of the SPE 3 example
(Kenyon and Behie 1987) showed that the best reduction in time was less than
20% for the extreme situation of 25 components and just one row/column with
nonzero BIPs. A better performance can be achieved by a simpler implementation
directly using the sparsity of the BIP matrix.
© 2013. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
13 March 2012
- Meeting paper published:
4 June 2012
- Revised manuscript received:
25 October 2012
- Manuscript approved:
31 October 2012
- Published online:
31 January 2013