Reservoir Engineering - General - A Demonstration of the Effect of ‘Dead-End’ Volume on Pressure...

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 773 KB
- Publication Date:
Abstract
In predicting the performance of a pattern injection operation, the engineer needs to know both the amount of oil to be recovered and the rate at which the recovcry will take place. This paper- describes fluid flow model studies on the effect of mobility ratio on the rate of oil recovery in a five-spot. The results show the change in fluid conductivity (total flow rate/pressure drop) as the sweep-ont pattern increases for mobility ratios between 0.1 (and 10. There data, when cornbitted with a knowledge of reservoir permeabilities and sweep-orit pattern efficiencies, cata he used to predict the cLrmulntivr oil production as a function of time for homogeneous five-spot injection systems. INTRODUCTION The flow potential in a pattern flood element is a function of the mobility ratio and how far the injected flood front has gone.1,2 For a waterflood project having a mobility ratio of one, the conductance—which is the flow rate per unit pressure drop (q/Ap)—-will remain the same throughout the life of the flood. If the mobility ratio is favorable ( < I), the conductance of the project will drop continuously throughout the operation. If, on the other hand, the mobility ratio is unfavorahlc. the conductance ratio will increase continuously. Therefore, if the reservoir engineer wishes to predict either the rate at a specified pressure or the pressure at some rate for a secondary recovery project, he must know how the conductance will vary during the flood. Other investigators have studied this problem using potentiometric models' or analytical solution'. The
Citation
APA:
Reservoir Engineering - General - A Demonstration of the Effect of ‘Dead-End’ Volume on Pressure...MLA: Reservoir Engineering - General - A Demonstration of the Effect of ‘Dead-End’ Volume on Pressure.... The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers,