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  • 1
    Description / Table of Contents: The 3D geological model is still regarded as one of the newest and most innovative tools for reservoir management purposes. The computer modelling of structures, rock properties and fluid flow in hydrocarbon reservoirs has evolved from a specialist activity to part of the standard desktop toolkit. The application of these techniques has allowed all disciplines of the subsurface team to collaborate in a common workspace. In today's asset teams, the role of the geological model in hydrocarbon development planning is key and will be for some time ahead. The challenges that face the geologists and engineers will be to provide more seamless interaction between static and dynamic models. This interaction requires the development of conventional and unconventional modelling algorithms and methodologies in order to provide more risk-assessed scenarios, thus enabling geologists and engineers to better understand and capture inherent uncertainties at each aspect of the geological model's life.
    Pages: Online-Ressource (226 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9781862392663
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Transport in porous media 12 (1993), S. 237-260 
    ISSN: 1573-1634
    Keywords: Effective properties ; relative permeability ; pseudoization ; rescaling ; heterogeneity ; simulation ; reservoir characterization
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Technology
    Notes: Abstract Oil reservoir properties can vary over a wide range of length scales. Reservoir simulation of the fluid flow uses numerical grid blocks have typical lengths of hundreds of metres. We need to specify meaningful values to put into reservoir engineering calculations given the large number of heterogeneities that they have to encompass. This process of rescaling data results in the calculation of ‘effective’ or ‘pseudo’ rock properties. That is a property for use on the large scale incorporating the many heterogeneities measured on smaller scales. For single phase flow, a variety of techniques have been tried in the past. These range from very simple statistical estimates to detailed numerical simulation. Unfortunately, the simple estimates tend to be inaccurate in real applications and the numerical simulation can be computationally expensive if not impossible for very fine grid representations of the reservoir. Likewise, pseudorelative permeabilities are time consuming to generate and often inaccurate. Real-space renormalization is an alternative technique which has been found to be computationally efficient and accurate when applied to single-phase flow. This approach solves the problem regionally rather than trying to solve the whole problem in one simulation. The effective properties of small regions are first calculated and then placed on a coarse grid. The grid is further coarsened and the process repeated until a single effective property has been calculated. This has enabled calculation of effective permeability of extremely large grids to be performed, up to 540 million grid blocks in one application. This paper extends the renormalization technique to two-phase fluid flow and shows that the method is at least 100 times faster than conventional pseudoization techniques. We compare the results with high resolution numerical simulation and conventional pseudoization methods for three different permeability models. We show that renormalization is as accurate as the conventional methods when used to predict oil recovery from heterogeneous systems.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 347: 25-41.
    Publication Date: 2010-11-08
    Description: This paper examines the impact of compartmentalization on oil recovery, the importance of identifying it during field appraisal, and methods to evaluate it using fluid data. The impact on recovery factor is highlighted using a global database of oil field recovery factors as a function of reservoir complexity and compartmentalization, and emphasized in two case studies. The effect of compartmentalization on oil recovery demonstrates the benefit in characterizing compartmentalization correctly during appraisal, so that the field can be developed in an optimal manner. Early characterization of field compartmentalization requires making maximum use of available fluid data during appraisal. When interpreting fluid data to identify compartmentalization, it is critical to take into account the different time-scales for various fluid signals (pressure, contacts, density, composition) to equilibrate, and to be able to extrapolate to field production time-scales. This is essential to avoid false negatives (compartments assumed absent due to homogeneous fluid properties, when in fact fluids would have equilibrated even in the presence of compartments), false positives (where fluid differences are interpreted as evidence of compartments when in fact there has not been sufficient time for equilibration to occur), and to resolve apparently conflicting data (some fluid indicators are at equilibrium, others are not). Rigorous simulation of fluid equilibration is a complex multiphase multidimensional process, and is generally reserved for specialist in-depth studies. However, order-of-magnitude evaluations can be made using analytical solutions in minutes, allowing many what-if' scenarios to be considered and uncertainty to be assessed. Analytical solutions for estimating the time required for spatially-varying fluid properties to revert to steady state distributions are reviewed. All these mixing processes are shown to be diffusive in character. An effective diffusion coefficient for each process can be calculated from the reservoir rock and fluid properties. For an isothermal system, the different time-scales and distances for each fluid-property variation to attain equilibrium can be compared on a single graph. Where the time elapsed since fluid-perturbation is known, analytical solutions can be used to estimate the degree of compartmentalization (e.g. permeability of barriers). These solutions lend themselves to the development of simple practical compartment-assessment tools for industry practitioners.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: This paper highlights the benefits of using knowledge of the rates of fluid mixing in the interpretation of reservoir fluid data. Comparison of the time it would take for a fluid difference to mix with the actual time available for mixing to occur allows two significant advances over a purely statistical analysis of reservoir fluid data: (1) differentiation of a step in fluid properties, indicative of a barrier to fluid communication, from a gradient indicative of incomplete mixing; and (2) quantitative estimation of the degree of compartmentalization that can readily be adapted into models for prediction of reservoir production performance. We review the existing equations that estimate the mixing times for three main types of variation in fluid properties (fluid contacts, fluid density and fluid chemistry). In addition, a new relationship for fluid pressure mixing is presented. In each case the relationships were validated by comparison with numerical simulation. The different fluid mixing processes were compared by applying the equations to a range of simple fluid scenarios in one simple reservoir description. This shows that mixing times for fluid mixing processes are diffusion > fluid density > fluid contacts > fluid pressure. For each scenario, the processes were analysed in terms of the volume of fluid that must move in order to bring the system to equilibrium and the drive for fluid mixing (pressure difference x permeability/viscosity). Perhaps surprisingly, there is an excellent linear relation between fluid mixing times (a) calculated from the mixing equations and (b) estimated from volume/drive. This indicates that fluid volumes and mixing drive are the main controls on fluid mixing times. This can be used to derive simple interpretation guidelines to estimate mixing rates even in the absence of quantitative modelling. A simple field case study demonstrates how this understanding of fluid mixing times can add value to the interpretation of reservoir fluid data.
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  • 5
  • 6
    Publication Date: 2015-11-16
    Description: The growing geographic disconnect between consumption of goods, the extraction and processing of resources, and the environmental impacts associated with production activities makes it crucial to factor global trade into sustainability assessments. Using an empirically validated environmentally extended global trade model, we examine the relationship between two key resources underpinning economies and human well-being—energy and freshwater. A comparison of three energy sectors (petroleum, gas, and electricity) reveals that freshwater consumption associated with gas and electricity production is largely confined within the territorial boundaries where demand originates. This finding contrasts with petroleum, which exhibits a varying ratio of territorial to international freshwater consumption, depending on the origin of demand. For example, although the United States and China have similar demand associated with the petroleum sector, international freshwater consumption is three times higher for the former than the latter. Based on mapping patterns of freshwater consumption associated with energy sectors at subnational scales, our analysis also reveals concordance between pressure on freshwater resources associated with energy production and freshwater scarcity in a number of river basins globally. These energy-driven pressures on freshwater resources in areas distant from the origin of energy demand complicate the design of policy to ensure security of fresh water and energy supply. Although much of the debate around energy is focused on greenhouse gas emissions, our findings highlight the need to consider the full range of consequences of energy production when designing policy.
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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  • 7
  • 8
    Publication Date: 2015-12-02
    Description: The growing geographic disconnect between consumption of goods, the extraction and processing of resources, and the environmental impacts associated with production activities makes it crucial to factor global trade into sustainability assessments. Using an empirically validated environmentally extended global trade model, we examine the relationship between two key resources underpinning...
    Keywords: Sustainability Science
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2015-06-01
    Print ISSN: 1364-0321
    Electronic ISSN: 1879-0690
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Published by Elsevier
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2012-08-01
    Description: Reservoir compartmentalization can seriously compromise a project’s economics if left undetected during appraisal. Its early identification is made more likely if maximum use is made of available fluid appraisal data. This involves making a critical comparison of time-scales for various fluid properties to equilibrate compared with the actual time since those properties were initially disturbed. Spatially varying fluid properties indicate compartmentalization if they have existed for longer than the time needed for them to equilibrate. Here we use data from appraisal wells and reservoir mixing time-scales to investigate vertical and horizontal compartmentalization in the Horn Mountain Field (Gulf of Mexico) and to quantify the properties of the baffles/barriers identified. We compare our results with earlier work using time-lapse geochemistry and mud gas isotope logging. Present fluid compositional variations in the field are shown not to be diagnostic of horizontal compartmentalization as the mixing time-scales by molecular diffusion are longer than the time since the reservoir filled. In contrast, pressure shifts and density differences are diagnostic. They indicate that faults within the Horn Mountain Field are relatively impermeable and would act as barriers during oil production. They also confirm that a shale-filled channel acts as a barrier to vertical flow.
    Print ISSN: 1354-0793
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Geosciences
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