Introduction To Reservoir Engineering
Introduction To Reservoir Engineering
Reservoir Engineering Terms Porosity: this is the ration of pore volume to bulk volume. It is expressed in fraction Permeability: this is the property of a reservoir that enables the movement of fluid (Darcy) Effective Permeability: this is the permeability of a reservoir when 100% saturated with a particular fluid Relative Permeability: this is the ration of effective permeability to absolute permeability Effective Porosity: this is the ratio interconnected pore volume to bulk volume Water Saturation: this is the ratio of the volume occupy by water to the pore volume Critical water saturation: critical water saturation defines the maximum water saturation that a formation with a given permeability and porosity can retain without producing water. Irreducible water saturation: This is the minimum water saturation at which water will remain immobile Formation volume factor: this is the ration of the volume of fluid in the reservoir to the volume at the surface Shrinkage factor: this is the inverse of formation volume factor
Cricondenbar (pcb)The Cricondenbar is the maximum pressure above which no gas can be formed regardless of temperature.
The corresponding temperature is called the Cricondenbar temperature Tcb.
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Phase envelope (two-phase region)The region enclosed by the bubble-point curve and the dew-point curve (line BCA), wherein gas and liquid coexist in equilibrium, is identified as the phase envelope of the hydrocarbon system.
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Bubble-point curve-The bubble-point curve (line BC) is defined as the line separating the liquid-phase region from the two-phase region.
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The appropriate quality line gives the ratio of the gas-cap volume to reservoir oil volume.
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Oil formation volume factor less than 1.2 bbl/STB. Gas-oil ratio less than 200 scf/STB Oil gravity less than 35 API Black or deeply colored
Temperature near critical temperature Tc. GOR in excess of 3,000 scf/STB. Oil formation volume factor of 2.0 bbl/STB or higher.
In general, if the reservoir temperature is above the critical temperature of the hydrocarbon system, the reservoir is classified as a natural gas reservoir. On the basis of their phase diagrams and the prevailing reservoir conditions, natural gases can be classified into four categories:
Retrograde gas-condensate Near-critical gas-condensate Wet gas Dry gas
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Gas-oil ratios between 8,000 to 70,000 scf/STB. Generally, the gas-oil ratio for a condensate system increases with time due to the liquid dropout and the loss of heavy components in the liquid. Condensate gravity above 50 API
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Reservoir temperature near critical temperature as shown below. Because all the quality lines converge at the critical point, a rapid liquid buildup will immediately occur below the dew point as the pressure is reduced to point 2.
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The hydrocarbon mixture exists as a gas both in the reservoir and in the surface facilities. The only liquid associated with the gas from a drygas reservoir is water. Usually a system having a gas-oil ratio greater than 100,000 scf/STB is considered to be a dry gas.
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