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HERO ID
8740034
Reference Type
Meetings & Symposia
Title
Reservoir fluid geodynamics; the link between petroleum systems and production concerns relating to fluids and tar distributions in reservoirs
Author(s)
Mullins, OC; Di Primio, R; Zuo, JY; Uchytil, S; Mishra, VK; Dumont, H; Pfeiffer, T; Achourov, VV; Pomerantz, AE; Forsythe, J; Betancourt, SS; Elshahawi, H
Year
2016
Publisher
Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)
Volume
2016-January
Language
English
DOI
10.2118/181535-ms
Abstract
Petroleum system modeling provides the timing, type and volume of fluids entering a reservoir, among other things. However, there has been little modeling of the fluid processes that take place within the reservoir in geologic time, yet these processes have a dramatic impact on production. Modeling and understanding of the reservoir then reinitiates with simulation of production for optimization purposes. The new discipline "reservoir fluid geodynamics" (RFG) establishes the link between the petroleum system context or modeling and present day reservoir realizations. This new discipline has been enabled by scientific developments of the new asphaltene equation of state and by the technology of downhole fluid analysis (DFA). Gasliquid equilibria are treated with the traditional cubic EoS. Crude oil fluid-asphaltene equilibria are treated with the Flory-Huggins-Zuo equation of state with its reliance on the Yen-Mullins model of asphaltenes. Thermodynamic treatment is essential in order to identify the extent of equilibrium in oil columns, thereby identifying fluid dynamics in geologic time. DFA is shown to be very effective for establishing asphaltene gradients vertically and laterally in reservoir fluids with great accuracy. In turn, this data tightly constrains the thermodynamic analyses. These methods have been applied to a large number of reservoir case studies over a period of ten years. For example, case studies are shown that indicate baffling and lower production for parts of the reservoir that have slower rates of fluid equilibration. In addition, the newly revealed lateral sweep in trap filling is established via RFG case studies. Underlying systematics, especially for gas charge into oil reservoir, have been revealed for a large number of fluid and tar distributions that enable a unifying and simplified treatment for seemingly intractable complexities. A case study is presented that shows three very different reservoir realizations in adjacent fault blocks for the same petroleum system model, where RFG explains all these differences. This enables key reservoir properties to be projected away from wellbore in ways not previously possible. Finally, universal work flows are shown which enable broad application of these methods through all phases of reservoir exploration and production. Copyright 2016, Society of Petroleum Engineers.
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