Calgary University - Introduction To Reservoir Engineering - Course Notes
Calgary University - Introduction To Reservoir Engineering - Course Notes
Chapter 1
Description and Estimation of Rock Properties
1. Definitions
1.1 Porosity
The porosity φ of a porous medium is the volume fraction of its pore
space. It is expressed as
V
φ = p
Vb (1-1)
Vb the bulk volume of the porous medium
Vp the pore volume.
The porosity varies between zero and unity, depending on the type of
porous material and the way it was formed.
Effective porosity is the amount of the void space that contributes to the
flow of fluids.
-1-
Hydrocarbon porosity refers to the part of the porosity that contains
hydrocarbon. It is total porosity multiplied by the fraction of the pore
volume that contains hydrocarbon.
-2-
⎛ P ⎞
V p = Vb −V1 −V2 ⎜⎜ 2 ⎟⎟
⎝ P2 − P1 ⎠
(1-2)
where Vb is the bulk volume of the sample which is determined in a
separate measurement.
iv) Density method. The bulk density of the sample ρb and the density of
the solid matrix of the sample ρs are determined. The total porosity of
the sample is calculated by
ρb
φ = 1−
ρs (1-3)
1.2 Permeability
-3-
k A ΔP
q=
μ L , (1-4)
q volumetric flow rate (cm3/sec)
A cross-sectional area of the sample (cm2)
L length of the sample in the flow direction (cm)
ΔP hydrostatic pressure drop (atm)
μ viscosity of the fluid (cP)
-4-
Both liquids and gases are routinely used to measure permeabilities.
Liquids, however, may interact with the rock sample and thus change the
pore structure of the medium and therefore the permeability of the
medium. For example, the flow of fresh water through porous samples
containing clay caused permeability reduction because of clay swelling
upon contact with fresh water.
SI unit system:
kA ⎛ dp dz ⎞
q=− ⎜ +ρg ⎟
μ ⎝ ds ds ⎠
-5-
k – m2, A – m2, μ – kg/m-sec, p – N/m2 (Pa), s – m, ρ – kg/m3, g – 9.8
m/sec2, q – m3/sec
-6-
The Klinkenberg Effect
The permeability of a porous medium sample measured by flowing air is
always greater than the permeability obtained when a liquid is the
flowing fluid. This is because that gases exhibit slippage at the pore wall
surface. The gas slippage results in a higher flow rate for the gas at a
given pressure differential. For a given porous medium, the calculated
permeability decreased as the mean pressure (pm) increased. If a plot of
calculated permeability versus 1/pm is extrapolated to the point of 1/pm =
0 (or pm = infinite), this permeability would be approximately equal to
the liquid permeability (see Figure 2). The straight-line relationship in
Fig.2 can be expressed as:
⎛ 1 ⎞
k g = k L + c⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ (1-6)
⎝ pm ⎠
kg = calculated gas permeability
pm = mean pressure (pm = (p1+p2)/2)
kL = Klinkenberg permeability
c = slope of the line
The magnitude of the Klinkenberg effect varies with the core
permeability and the type of the gas used in the experiment.
-7-
Figure 3. Effect of gas pressure on measured gas permeability for
various gases. (Calhourn, J., 1976)
∫α ( D)dD = 1 .
0
(1-7)
Mercury porosimetry
-The volume of mercury penetrating the sample is measured as a
function of the pressure imposed on the mercury.
-Drainage capillary pressure curves obtained by mercury intrusion
porosimeter are customarily interpreted in terms of the bundle of
capillary tubes model.
-The pore size is calculated from this pressure by Laplace’s
equation of capillarity and, using the bundle of capillary tube
model of pore structure, the volume of mercury is assigned to this
pore size.
-8-
In the case of interconnected pore space the “body” of each pore is
connected to the bodies of adjacent pores via “necks” or “throats”. The
“sizes” of both the pore bodies and the pore throats play an important
role in determining various macroscopic properties, such as
permeability, capillary pressure curves of porous media, etc. Both the
body and the throat sizes can be “measured” using computer
reconstruction of pore structure from photomicrographs of serial
sections of the sample.
-9-
1.5 Isothermal Compressibility (coefficient)
1 dv 1 ⎛ dv ⎞
c=− c = − ⎜ ⎟
v dp or more generally v ⎜⎝ dp ⎟⎠T (1-9)
Where c = isothermal compressibility
v = volume
p = pressure
1 ⎛ dvr ⎞
cr = − ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ (1-10)
vr ⎝ dp ⎠T
1 ⎛ dvb ⎞
cb = − ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ (1-11)
vb ⎝ dp ⎠T
- 10 -
1 ⎛ dv p ⎞
cf = ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ (1-12)
vp ⎝ dp ⎠T
1 ⎛ dφ ⎞
cf = ⎜ ⎟
Or φ ⎜⎝ dp ⎟⎠T (1-13)
2. Fundamentals of Capillarity
Types of interfaces
liquid—Gas (L—G)
Liquid—Liquid (L—L)
Liquid—Solid ( L—S)
Gas—Solid (G—S)
- 11 -
is called surface or interfacial tension. Surface tension may be thought of
either as a force per unit length in a surface (dyne/cm, or equivalently,
mN/m), or a free energy per unit surface area (erg/cm2, or equivalently,
mJ/m2).
• The term Surface Tension is reserved for interfaces involving a
liquid in equilibrium with their own vapour, or for liquid-air type
of interfaces.
• The term Interfacial Tension (IFT) is used for L-L or L-S types of
interfaces.
The physical meaning of force per unit length and energy per unit area is
understood by the following examples.
- 12 -
Typical IFT values
H2O-air 72 mN/m
Hg-air 450 mN/m
Hydrocarbons-air ~20—50 mN/n
H2O-Oil ~20 mN/m
(H2O + NaCl)-Oil ~30 mN/m
(H2O + Soap)-Oil ~0.1mN/m to 1×10-3mN/m
Young’s equation:
σ sg − σ sl = σ lg cosθ , (1-14)
where σ lg and σsg are the surface tensions of liquid and solid,
respectively, and σ sl is the interfacial tension between the liquid and the
solid.
- 13 -
The contact angle may have any value between 0 and 180º. It is
customary to simply classify fluids into two categories: wetting and non-
wetting fluid. For wetting fluids, 0 ≤ θ < 90º, and for non-wetting fluids,
90º < θ ≤ 180º. In the pores of porous media, the curved interfaces
between two immiscible fluids may take different shapes and directions
of the curvature.
- 14 -
2.3 Capillary Pressure
PC ≡ ΔP = Pnw − Pw (1-15)
where subscripts w and nw represent wetting and non-wetting phase,
respectively. As, at equilibrium, Pnw > Pw, the capillary pressure is, by
definition, always positive.
- 15 -
The general case is when the liquid/gas surface or liquid/liquid interface
meets the circular capillary wall through contact angle θ, as illustrated in
Fig. 2-3.
2σ
PC = cosθ . (1-19)
r
- 16 -
2.4 Capillary Rise
- 17 -
2.5 Capillary Pressure Curves
Capillary pressure-saturation relationship
When a porous sample saturated with a single fluid, e.g. air, is
submerged in a second fluid, e.g., water, one of the following
phenomena may be observed:
1. The water may spontaneously imbibe into the sample and thus
displacement of air from the sample takes place.
Water – wetting phase
Air – non wetting phase
Porous sample – water wet
Displacement – free imbibition
2. The water may not penetrate at all into the sample unless it is
placed under an externally applied pressure.
Water – non wetting phase
- 18 -
Figure 8. Typical capillary pressure curves
- 19 -
Primary drainage curve:
The relationship characteristic of the displacement of the wetting
phase from 100% saturation to the irreducible saturation.
Hysteresis loop
Experimental evidence has indicated that the irreducible saturation
obtained by initial drainage is the same as that obtained by
secondary drainage. When the residual saturations are the same,
the imbibition after secondary drainage will follow exactly the
imbibition curve obtained after primary drainage. The secondary
drainage curve and the secondary imbibition curve constitute a
closed and reproducible hysteresis loop.
Leverett J-Function
Because the capillary pressure is a function of pore size, which is a
function of porosity and permeability, it varies with reservoir porosity
and permeability. It is not practical to measure a separate capillary
pressure curve for each value of porosity and permeability, all capillary
pressure curves for a particular reservoir can be combined into one curve
by use of the Leverett J-function given by:
pc k
J= (1-21)
σ cosθ φ
- 20 -
If the capillary pressure curves are measured for several different
porosities and permeabilities, all the data can be plotted on one curve by
use of J-function.
- 21 -
3.2 Saturations
Saturation is defined as the fraction, or percent, of the pore volume (PV)
occupied by a particular fluid (oil, gas, or water):
So + Sg + Sw = 1.0.
kA ΔP
q=
Darcy’s Law: μ L
Conditions of steady cocurrent flow are usually established by injecting
both fluids at constant rates and allowing time for the discharge rates to
become equal to the injection rates. Under these conditions it has been
found in experiments that the saturation and the capillary pressure are
approximately independent of position.
- 22 -
k i A ΔPi
qi =
μi L , i = o, w (1-22)
qi the volumetric flow rate
ΔPi the pressure drop
μi the viscosity of phase i.
ki the “effective permeability” of the porous medium to phase i.
k ri k A ΔPi
qi = i = o, w (1-24)
μi L
ko + k g + k w ≤ k
Or k ro + k rg + k rw ≤ 1
- 23 -
Figure 9 Schematic of relative permeability curves of primary
drainage and secondary imbibition (Dullien, 1988).
- 24 -
from 2 to 40 hours or even longer, depending on the sample permeability
and the method used.
- 25 -
Advantages of the unsteady-state method:
• Fast
• The relative permeabilities measured in this fashion will exactly
reproduce the experimental oil recovery data (from which they
were derived).
- 26 -
Effect of Wettability
Water-wet Oil-wet
Connate water saturation Usually greater than 20 to Generally less that 15%,
25% frequently less that 10%
Saturation at which oil Greater that 50% water Less than 50% water
and water relative saturation saturation
permeabilities are equal
Relative permeability to Generally less that 30% Greater than 50% and
water at maximum water approaching 100%
saturation; i.e., floodout
- 27 -
ENPE 523
Introduction to Reservoir Engineering
• Vapor-pressure line
• Critical point
• Triple point
• Melting-point line
• Sublimation-pressure line
1
Typical pressure-temperature diagram of a multi-component mixture
Phase diagram depends on the composition of the mixture. Initially each hydro-
carbon accumulation will have its own phase diagram, which depends only on the
composition of the accumulation.
2
Examples of paths of production and phase change:
(Textbook Page 7)
Point A: Fluid at 300°F and 3700 psia. One-phase state (gas) in reservoir during
production.
A-A1: It will remain in the single-phase or gaseous state as the pressure declines
along path A-A1.
A-A2 : The fluid produced through the wellbore and into surface separators may
enter the two-phase region due to the temperature decline (A-A2).This accounts
for the production of condensate liquid at the surface from a gas in the reservoir.
B1-B2: Below dew-point pressure a liquid condenses out of the reservoir fluid as
a fog or dew. This type of reservoir is commonly called a dew-point (retrograde)
reservoir. The term retrograde is used because generally vaporization, rather than
condensation, occurs during isothermal expansion.
3
B2-B3: Vaporization of the retrograde liquid occurs from B2 to the abandonment
pressure B3. Low reservoir temperature and high abandonment pressure will
cause more loss of the condensate.
Point C: Fluid at 2900 psia and 75°F. One-phase state (liquid). The temperature
is below the critical temperature. This type is called a bubble-point (undersatu-
rated) reservoir.
C-C1: Pressure declines, the bubble point will be reached (at 2550 psia) at point
C1.
Below C1: Bubbles, or a free-gas phase, will appear. The free gas evolved begins
to flow to the well bore, and in ever increasing quantities. Other names for this
type of liquid (oil) reservoir are depletion, dissolved gas, solution gas drive, ex-
pansion, and internal gas drive.
PV = nR’T (1.4)
p - absolute pressure
V - volume
n - moles
T - absolute temperature
R' - the gas constant
4
Standard conditions: 14.7 psia and 60°F.
Volume of gas at standard conditions: SCF (standard cubic feet), MSCF (1000
standard cubic feet), MMSCF.
Example: Calculate the moles, pounds and molar volume at standard conditions
of ethane in a 500 cu ft tank at 100 psia and 100oF.
2. Specific Gravity
Mw = molecular weight
Specific gravity - the ratio of the density of a gas at a given temperature and
pressure to the density of air at the same temperature and pressure, usually 14.7
psia and 60°F.
pM w
ρg R'T Mw ⎛ Mw ⎞
γg = = = ⎜= ⎟ (1.5)
ρ air p x 28.97 28.97 ⎝ 29 ⎠
R 'T
3. Real Gas Law
5
Compressibility factor z (gas deviation factor) – a measure of the deviation from
the ideal behavior. It is a dimensionless quantity and varies usually between 0.70
and 1.20.
6
Example: A gas has a volume of 364.6 cu cm at 213°F and 3250 psia. At 14.80
psia and 82°F it has a volume of 70,860 cu cm.
7
2). Estimation from specific gravity:
(Textbook P.17)
8
4. Gas Formation Volume Factor Bg
Bg = psczT/Tscp (1.16)
(The constants in Eqs. (1.17) are for 14.7 psia and 60°F)
Example: For Bell Field gas at 3250 psia, 213°F, and z = 0.910:
Discussion:
1) 1 SCF (at 14.7 psia and 60°F) gas occupies 0.00533 ft3 or 0.000949 bbl of
space in the reservoir at 3250 psia and 213°F.
2) 1000 ft3 of reservoir pore volume in the Bell Field gas reservoir at 3250
psia contains
G = 1000/0.00533 = 188MSCF
1 dv
Definition:
cg = −
v dp
1). Isothermal compressibility of ideal gases:
9
2). Isothermal compressibility of real gases:
Discussion:
I. For an ideal gas z = 1.0 and dz/dp = 0 , the compressibility is the reciprocal
of the pressure. That is:
cg = 1/p (for ideal gas)
II. For real gases, cg is a function of both pressure and z-factor.
a. At low pressures, the z-factor decreases as pressure increases. dv/dp
is negative and cg is larger than in the case of an ideal gas.
b. At high pressures, the z-factor increase with pressure. dv/dp is posi-
tive and cg is less than in the case of an ideal gas.
10
Fig 1.6. Gas compressibility of gas deviation factor versus pressure (Textbook).
Example Find the compressibility of a gas from z-factor curve (Fig 1.6).
Given: The gas deviation factor curve for a gas at 150 oF, Fig. 1.6.
Solution:
At 1000 psia, dz/dp = - 127x10-6, z = 0.83
11
3) Isothermal compressibility of gas mixtures:
1 1 dz
cg = −
p pc p pr zp pc dp pr (1.20)
Define: cr = cgppc
There is:
1 1 dz
cr = −
p pr z dp pr (1.21)
Correlations presented in Figs 1.7 and 1.8 can be used to find the isothermal
compressibility for gas mixtures.
Oil gravity, γo, is defined as the ratio of the density of the oil to the density of
water, both taken at the same temperature and pressure, mostly at standard con-
ditions.
ρo
γo =
ρw
API gravity is defined as:
141.5
o
API = −131.5
γo
Where γo is the specific gravity of the oil at standard conditions.
12
2. Solution Gas-Oil Ratio, Rso
• The solubility of natural gas in crude oil depends on the pressure, tem-
perature, and the composition of the gas and the crude oil.
• The quantity of solution gas increases with pressure.
• The quantity of solution gas decreases with temperature.
• The quantity of solution gas increases as the compositions of the gas and
crude oil approach each other.
Fig. 1.11 shows the change of Rso of an oil with pressure (textbook).
Determination of Rso
13
3. Formation Volume Factor of Oil, Bo (FVF)
Bo =
bo = 1/Bo
Example of FVF change with pressure and temperature is shown in Fig. 1.12.
Fig. 1.12 FVF of Big Sandy Field oil (Text book page 34)
14
Two-phase formation volume factor (Total formation volume factor) Bt
Definition: The volume in barrels one stock tank barrel and its initial dissolved
gas occupies at any pressure and reservoir temperature.
15
Example of calculating Bt at 1200 psia using Fig 1.13:
Knowns:
• Based on 1STB
• Initial solution gas = 567 SCF/STB
• At 1200 psia and 160°F the liberated gas has a deviation factor of 0.890
• liquid phase shrinks to 1.210 bbl at 1200 psia
• At 1200 psia Rso = 337 SCF/STB
Solution:
The gas volume factor with reference to standard conditions
Bg = 0.02829 zT/p = 0.02829x 0.890 x 620/1200 Eq. (1.17)
= 0.01300 cu ft/SCF
= 0.002316 bbl/SCF
Rsoi – Rso = 567 – 337 = 230
Vg = Bg(Rsoi – Rso) = 230 x 0.002316 = 0.5326 bbl
Bo = 1.210 bbl/STB
Bt = 1.210 + 0.002316 (567 - 337)
= 1.210 + 0.533 = 1.743 bbl/STB
16
4. Isothermal Compressibility of Oil, co
1 dv
Definition:
co = −
v dp
• dv/dp is negative, the negative sign converts the compressibility to a posi-
tive number.
• co changes with pressure.
5. Viscosity of Oil
17
ENPE 523 Introduction to Reservoir Engineering
3.1 Introduction
The gas pore volume Vg is related to the bulk, or total, reservoir volume
Vb by the average porosity and the average connate water Sw.
Vg = Vb φ (1 − S w )
43,560Vbφ (1 − S w )
G= (3.1)
Bg
1
Sw = 23%
Bg (@3250 psia) = 0.00533 cu ft/SCF
ΔVb the bulk volume between n and n+1 isopach lines (acre-feet)
An the area enclosed by the lower isopach line (acre)
An+1 the area enclosed by the upper lsopach line (acre)
h the interval between the lsopach lines (feet)
The volume between successive isopach lines, and the total volume is the
sum of these separate volumes.
h
Or use the trapezoid equation: ΔVb = ( An + An+1 )
2
For a series of successive trapezoids:
2
h
Vb = ( A0 + 2 A1 + 2 A2 + ... + 2 An−1 + An )+tavg An (3.3)
2
∑p i
Well average pressure = 0
(3.4)
n
n
∑p A i i
Areal average pressure = 0
n
(3.5)
∑A 0
i
∑ p Ah i i i
Volumetric average pressure = 0
n
(3.6)
∑Ah 0
i i
Notes:
n is the number of wells in (3.4) and of reservoir units in (3.5) and (3.6).
Volumetric average is used in the volumetric and material balance calculations.
3
3. Recovery from Volumetric Gas Reservoirs
43,560 φ (1 − S w )
G= (SCF/ac-ft) (3.7)
Bg
43,560 φ (1 − S w )
Ga = (SCF/ac-ft) (3.8)
Bga
⎡ 1 1 ⎤
Unit recovery = 43,560φ (1 − S w ) ⎢ B − B ⎥ SCF/ac-ft (3.9)
⎣⎢ gi ⎥
ga ⎦
(G − Ga ) Bgi
Recovery factor =
= 1 − (3.10)
G Bga
4
4. Recovery under Water Drive
Under water drive, after an initial decline, water enters the reservoir at a
rate to equal the production, and the pressure stabilizes. In this case the
stabilized pressure is the abandonment pressure.
⎡1 − S wi S gr ⎤
Unit recovery = 43,560φ ⎢ B − B ⎥ SCF/ac-ft (3.11)
⎣⎢ gi ⎥
ga ⎦
(G − Ga ) S gr Bgi
Recovery factor =
= 1 − (3.12)
G 1 − S wi Bga
⎡1 − S wi − S gr ⎤
Unit Recovery = 43,560 x φ ⎢ ⎥
⎢⎣ Bgi ⎥⎦
⎡1 − S wi − S gr ⎤
Recovery Factor = ⎢ ⎥
⎢⎣ B gi ⎥⎦
5
Discussion:
• For the same residual gas saturation (or the same gas volume),
higher abandonment pressure will retain more mass of gas, or the
recovery will be greater for the lower stabilization pressure.
• Generally gas recoveries by water drive are lower than by
volumetric depletion (the same conclusion does not apply to oil
recovery).
Material balance is used to find the gas in place for the reservoir as a
whole from production and PVT data.
For most gas reservoirs, the formation and water compressibilities are
negligible.
Vp = (G – Gp)Bg + Wi + We – WpBw
6
If We = 0 and Wp = 0 Eq. (3.15) reduces to:
p sc zT
From Eq. (1.16), Bg =
Tsc p
p sc zT p zT
We have Bg = and Bgi = sc i i . Substituting Bg and Bgi gives:
Tsc p Tsc pi
psc zT p zT psc zT
G − G sc i i = Gp (3.17)
Tsc p Tsc pi Tsc p
Eq (3.18):
7
Discussion of Fig. 3.6:
1) If p/z is set equal to zero, Gp = G
2) The plot could be extrapolated to any abandonment p/z to find the
initial reserve.
3) A plot of Gp versus p is not linear (why?)
4) In water-drive reservoirs, Gp vs. p/z is not linear. The pressure drops
less rapidly than in volumetric reservoirs.
pscG p piVi pV
= − i (3.20)
Tsc ziT zT
pscG p
Tsc
Vi =
Or pi p (3.20-1)
− f
z iT zfT
8
3.6. Gas Equivalent of Produced Condensate and Water
n R'TSC
GE (1STB ) = VSC = (3.21)
pSC
mass 350 γ o
n = = (1bbl of water = 350.5 lb)
M wo M wo
9
ENPE 523 Introduction to Reservoir Engineering
On the basis of 1STB and (R1 + R3) SCF gas, the mass of the well fluid
is:
Mass of the well fluid = Mass of the gas + Mass of the liquid
( R1 γ 1 + R3 γ 3 ) x 29
mW = + 350γ o = 0.0764( R1 γ 1 + R3 γ 3 ) + 350γ o
380
Total moles
( R1 + R3 ) 350γ o
nt = + = 0.00264( R1 + R3 ) + 350γ o / M wo
380 Mo
1
The molecular weight of the total well fluid
mW 0.0764 ( R1 γ 1 + R2 γ 2 ) + 350 γ o
MW = =
nt 0.00264 ( R1 + R3 ) + 350γ o / M wo
MW ( R1 γ 1 + R3 γ 3 ) + 4600 γ o
γW = = (4.1)
29 ( R1 + R3 ) + 133,000γ o / M wo
The molecular weight of the stock tank oil is given by the following
correlation:
5954 42.43γ o
M wo = = (3.22)
ρo , API − 8.811 1.008 − γ o
2
3
4
3. Recombination of surface fluids – composition known
Known:
• Compositions of the stock tank liquid, separator gas, and stock
tank gas
• The producing gas –oil ratios
Steps:
• Convert gas-oil ratios in SCF/STB to lb-mole gas/lb-mole stock
tank liquid (the density and molecular weight of the liquid must be
calculated).
• The gas-oil ratios of lb-moles are used to combine the
compositions of separator gas, stock tank gas and stock tank oil in
the proper ratios.
5
Solutions:
Mole ratios:
93.0 lb mole SP gas/lb-mole STO
0.595 lb mole SP gas/lb-mole STO
6
ENPE 523 Introduction to Reservoir Engineering
1. Introduction
1
Recovery per ac-ft (in STB):
⎡ (1 − S w ) (1 − S w − S g ) ⎤
Recovery = 7 , 758 φ ⎢ − ⎥ (5.1)
⎣ B oi Bo ⎦
(1 − S w − S g ) Boi
Recovery factor = 1 − (5.2)
(1 − S w ) Bo
7,758φ (1 − S w − S or )
Recovery = (5.3)
Boi
(1 − S w − S or )
Recovery factor = (5.4)
(1 − S w )
2
3. Material Balance
@ p > pb
1) Neglecting change in porosity of rocks with the change of internal
fluid pressure
2) Zero or negligible water influx
3) Initially undersaturated (initially only connate water and oil, with
their solution gas)
4) Solubility of gas in reservoir water negligible
5) Water production small and negligible
6) From Pi to Pb, the reservoir oil volume constant, and oil produced
by liquid expansion.
NBoi = (N – Np)Bo
@ p > pb, Bt = Bo and Boi = Bti (see Fig. 5.2), rearranging the above
equation gives:
Np Bo − Boi Bt − Bti
RF = = = (5.8)
N Bo Bt
3
@ p < pb
Below bubble point pressure, a free gas phase develops. The
hydrocarbon pore volume remains constant, that is
Voi = Vo + Vg (5.9)
Terms in Eq (5.9):
Voi = NBoi
Vo = (N – Np)Bo
Vg = [Initial total gas] - [solution gas in res.] – [produced gas]
= [NRsoi − (N - Np) Rso − NpRp]Bg
4
Adding and subtracting the term NpRsoiBg on the right side hand of the
above equation, applying Bt = Bo +(Rsoi –Rso)Bg, and rearranging it give
Eq (5.6) of the textbook:
Discussion:
• Rp - net cumulative produced gas-oil ratio of the produced from the
reservoir (Gp) and all the oil produced (Np)
• RF is fixed by the PVT properties and the produced gas-oil ratio
(see 5.11)
• Large produced gas-oil ratios give low recoveries and vice versa.
5
4. Calculations Including Formation and Water Compressibilities
@ p > pb
NBoi = (N – Np)Bo
2. Consider the water influx and water production (without considering
compressibility of water and formation):
NBoi
Volume of pore space decreases V f c f Δp = c f Δp
1 − S wi
NBoi
Wcw Δp = V f S wi cw Δp = S wi cw Δp
Expansion of water 1 − S wi
6
NBoi + W – V f c f Δp = (N – Np)Bo + (W + We –WpBw) + Wcw Δp
Then
⎡ cw S wi + c f ⎤
N ( Bo − Boi ) + NBoi ⎢ ⎥ Δ p + We = N p Bo + BwW p (5.21)
⎣ 1 − S wi ⎦
Solve for N:
N p Bo − We + BwW p
N=
⎡c S + c ⎤ (5.22)
Bo − Boi + Boi ⎢ w wi f ⎥ Δp
⎣ 1 − S wi ⎦
vo − voi B − Boi
co = = o
voi ( pi − p ) Boi Δp
Therefore,
Bo = Boi + Boi co Δp (5.23)
NBoi
Expansion of oil NBoi co Δp = V f S o co Δp = S o co Δp
1 − S wi
(Above the bubble point, Bo = Bt, and Boi = Bti)
7
Substituting (5.23) into (5.21) and rearranging gives:
⎡ co S o + cw S wi + c f
⎤
NBoi ⎢ ⎥ Δp = N p Bo − We + BwW p (5.25)
⎣ 1 − S wi ⎦
co S o + cw S wi + c f
Effective fluid compressibility, ce, is defined as: ce = 1 − S wi
N p Bo
N=
ce Δp Boi (5.28)
Np Bo − Boi Bt − Bti
= = (5.8)
N Bo Bt
@ p < pb ,
N=
[ ]
N p Bt + ( R p − Rsoi ) Bg − We + BwW p
⎡c S + c ⎤ (5.29)
Bt − Bti + Bti ⎢ w wi f ⎥ Δp
⎣ 1 − S wi ⎦
8
Part I The General Material Balance Equation
1. Introduction
1
Change in Oil Volume:
Define:
Initial reservoir free gas volume GBgi
m= =
Initial reservoir oil volume NBoi
⎡ mNBoi ⎤
Free gas at time t = ⎢ + NRsoi ⎥ − N p R p − (N − N p )Rso (in SCF)
⎣ Boi ⎦
⎡ mNBoi ⎤
Re servoir free gas volume at time t = ⎢ + NRsoi − N p R p − (N − N p )Rso ⎥ Bg
⎣ Boi ⎦
⎡ mNBoi ⎤
Change in free gas volume = mNBoi − ⎢ + NRsoi − N p R p − (N − N p )Rso ⎥ Bg (2.2)
⎣ Boi ⎦
2
Change in Water Volume:
NBoi + mNBoi
Initial void space can be expressed as: Vf =
1 − S wi
NBoi + mNBoi
Initial water reservoir volume: W = V f S wi = S wi
1 − S wi
Change in Change in
water pore
volume + volume
⎡ cw S wi + c f ⎤
= W − W B + (1 + m ) NBoi ⎢ ⎥ Δp (2.5)
⎣ 1 − S wi
e p w
⎦
3
Equating the changes in the oil and free gas volumes to the negative of the changes in the
water and rock volumes:
⎡ mNBoi Bg ⎤
NBoi − NBo + N p Bo + mNBoi − ⎢ ⎥ − NRsoi Bg + N p R p Bg + NBg Rso − N p Bg Rso
⎢⎣ Bgi ⎥⎦
⎡ cw S wi + c f ⎤
= W − W B + (1 + m ) NBoi ⎢ ⎥ Δp
⎣ 1 − S wi
e p w
⎦
Bt = Bo + ( Rsoi − Rso ) Bg
And Boi = Bti
⎛ Bg ⎞
[ ]
N ( Bti − Bt ) + N p Bt + ( R p − Rsoi ) Bg + mNBti ⎜1 −
⎜ B ⎟
⎟
⎝ gi ⎠
⎡ cw S wi + c f ⎤
= We − W p Bw + (1 + m) NBti ⎢ ⎥ Δp (2.6)
⎣ 1 − S wi ⎦
mNBti ⎡ cw S wi + c f ⎤
N ( Bt − Bti ) + ( Bg − Bgi ) + (1 + m) NBti ⎢ ⎥ Δp + We
Bgi ⎣ 1 − S wi ⎦
4
Discussion of Eq. (2.7):
• The first two terms account for the expansion of any oil
and/or gas zones.
• The third term accounts for the change in pore volume, which
includes pore space decrease and expansion of the connate
water.
• The fourth term is the amount of water influx that has
occurred into the reservoir.
5
ENPE 523 Introduction to Reservoir Engineering
1. Introduction
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
4. Laboratory PVT Studies (Reservoir Fluid Studies, PVT Studies, Phase
Behavior Studies)
9
10
11
12
ENPE 523 Introduction to Reservoir Engineering
1. Introduction
• Flow of fluids in reservoirs and the models that are used to relate
reservoir pressure to flow rate.
• Introduction to well testing.
• Discussion limited to single-phase flow.
kA ΔP
q=
Darcy's law (1856): μ s
k = permeability, darcy (D)
μ = fluid viscosity, cp
A = cross-sectional area of the porous medium sample, cm2
p = pressure, atm
s = Length of the porous medium sample, cm
1
3. The classification of reservoir flow system
1) incompressible
• Simplifies many equations and sufficiently accurate for many
purposes
• No true incompressible fluids
2) slightly compressible
V = VR ec ( p R − p ) (7.2)
R = reference conditions
V = VR [1 + c( p R − p )] (7.3)
3) compressible
2
4. Steady-state flow
kA ( p1 − p2 )
q = 0.001127 (bbl/d)
μ L
or
kA ( p1 − p2 )
q = 0.001127 (STB/day) (7.7)
μB L
Example:
pressure differential = 100 psi
permeability = 250 md
viscosity = 2.5 cp
formation volume factor = 1.127 bbl/STB
length = 450 ft
cross-sectional area = 45 sq ft
q = 1.0 STB/day
3
4.2 Linear flow of slightly compressible fluids
Recall Eq (7.3) V = VR [1 + c( pR − p )]
There is: q = q R [1 + c( p R − p )]
Units: For gas flow rate, we want to use SCF/day; In Darcy’s law under
field unit system, flow rate is in bbl/day.
pSCTz
Recall Eq (1.17): Bg = (bbl/SCF)
5.615TSC p
q (SCF/day) x Bg (bbl/SCF) = qBg (bbl/day)
qpSCTz
qBg = (q in SCF/day)
5.615TSC p
Darcy’s law:
4
Variation of viscosity and z-factor:
(7.10)
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
ENPE 523 Introduction to Reservoir Engineering
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
ENPE 523 Introduction to Reservoir Engineering
Chapter 8
Water Influx
1. Introduction
• Many reservoirs are bounded on a portion or all their perimeters by
water bearing rocks – aquifers.
• As reservoir fluids are produced, a pressure differential develops
between the surrounding aquifer and the reservoir. The aquifer
reacts by encroaching across the original hydrocarbon-water
contact.
• Aquifers retard pressure decline in reservoirs by providing a source
of water influx We.
• We is a function of time (production).
• We is dependent on the size of aquifer and the pressure drop from
the aquifer to the reservoir.
2. Steady-state method
Schilthuis Steady-state method is the simplest model for water influx.
Water influx is proportional to the pressure drawdown (pi – p):
dWe
= k ′ ( pi − p) (8.1)
dt
Integrating Eq (8.1) gives
t
We = k ′∫ ( pi − p)dt (8.2)
0
Where k ′ = water flux constant, bbl/day-psi
p = pressure at the original oil-water contact
pi = initial pressure at the external boundary of the aquifer.
1
Calculation of k ′ and We from production data:
dWe dN p dN p dW p
= Bo + ( R − Rso ) Bg + Bw (8.3)
dt dt dt dt
where
dN p
= daily oil production rate, STB/day
dt
dN
( R − Rso ) p = daily free gas production rate, SCF/day
dt
dW p
= daily water production rate, STB/day
dt
dWe dN p dN p dW p
= Bt + ( R − Rsoi ) Bg + Bw (8.4)
dt dt dt dt
2
If the pressure stabilizes and the withdraw rates are not reasonably
constant, water influx in the pressure stabilized period Δt can be
calculated from the total productions of oil, gas and water within Δt:
dWe dN p dW p
= Bt + Bw (8.8)
dt dt dt
3
4
3. VEH unsteady-state method
• Van Everdingen and Hurst solutions to the single-phase unsteady-
state flow equation is used to calculate water influx.
• The hydrocarbon reservoir is the inner boundary condition and is
analogous to the well in Chapter 7 and the aquifer is the flow
medium analogous to the reservoir in Chapter 7.
• Properties of aquifer are assumed homogeneous and constant.
• Reservoir and aquifer are assumed cylindrical in shape.
re
rR
5
The dimensionless time and dimensionless radius are defined as
kt
t D = 0.0002637
φμ ct rR2
(8.12)
re
r D=
rR (8.13)
6
7
8
WeD as a function of tD and rD.
9
Values for Δpj are determined from measure pressures. The pressure
changes are calculated as follows to approximate the pressure-time
curve:
1
Δp1 = ( pi − p1 ) (8.14)
2
1
Δp2 = ( pi − p2 ) (8.15)
2
1
Δp3 = ( pi − p3 ) (8.16)
2
1
and Δp j = ( p j − 2 − p j ) (8.17)
2
10
4. Fetkovich Pseudosteady-state method
2. Calculate the productivity index, J, for flow from the aquifer to the
reservoir
For finite aquifer with no flow at the outer boundary:
0.007082kh θ
J= (8.19)
r
μ (ln e − 0.75) 360
rR
For finite aquifer with constant pressure the outer boundary:
0.007082kh θ
J= (8.20)
r
μ ln e 360
rR
11
4. Calculate the water influx during a time step
Wei ⎛ jpi Δt n
⎞
ΔWe = ⎜
( pn −1 − p Rn ) 1 − e Wei ⎟
pi ⎜ ⎟ (2.22)
⎝ ⎠
pn−1 = average aquifer pressure at the end of (n-1)th time step
12
ENPE 523 Introduction to Reservoir Engineering
Chapter 9
Decline Analysis
1. Introduction
• The most widely used method of forecasting future production
form oil and gas fields since Arps developed the technique in 1945.
• The technique has few fundamental theoretical foundations.
• The simplicity and success of its forecasts responsible for its
general acceptance and use.
• Decline analysis involves the use of curves of flow rate versus time
of the well.
The decline rate is defined as the rate of change of the natural logarithm
of the production rate with respect to time:
1 dq d (ln q)
d =− =− (9.2)
q dt dt
The minus sign has been added because dq and dt have opposite signs
and it is convenient to have d always positive.
1
Arps recognized the following three types of rate decline behaviour:
1. Exponential decline, n = 0
qt = qi e − d i t (9.3)
The cumulative production at time t is given by
qi − qt
Np = (9.4)
di
Np =
qin
(1 − n)
(
qi1− n − qt1− n ) (9.6)
3. Harmonic decline, n = 1
qi
qt =
(1 + d i t ) (9.7)
and
qi ⎛ qi ⎞
Np = ln⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ (9.8)
di ⎝ qt ⎠
2
3. Parameter Estimation for Decline Analysis
1. Exponential decline
The most widely used of the three methods, primarily because it is easy
to determined the parameters and gives a more conservative estimation
of the future reservoirs for given parameters.
Taking the natural log of both sides of the equation (9.3) gives:
ln qt = ln qi − d it (9.9)
6.2
6
lnq (STB/d)
5.8
5.6
5.4
5.2
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40
t (month)
3
2. Harmonic decline
di
ln qt = ln qi − Np (9.10)
qi
A plot of lnqt vs. Np gives a straight line:
slope m = -di/qi,
y-intercept b = lnqi
6.4
5.8
5.6
5.4
5.2
0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000 14000 16000
Np
1 / qt = 1 / qi + (d i / qi )t (9.11)
slope m = di/qi,
y-intercept b = 1/qi
4
3. Hyperbolic decline
• All real wells have hyperbolic decline.
• Approaches to calculation of parameters of hyperbolic decline
include trial-and-error methods, type-curve overlays, graphical
methods, mathematical or statistical analysis.
y = -1.6667x + 2.699
2
R =1
log qt
2.6
2.4
0 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08 0.1 0.12 0.14 0.16
Log (1+ndit)
5
Method 2: Using Equation (9.6)
12
y = -0.0002x + 12.011
11.5 2
R =1
11
qt^(1-n)
10.5
.
10
9.5
9
0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000 14000 16000
Np