Applicability of heat-exchanger theory to estimate heat losses to surrounding formations in a thermal flood

Abstract Heat losses to cap and base rocks undermine the performance of a thermal flood. As a contribution to this subject, this paper investigates the applicability of the principles of heat exchanger to characterise heat losses between a petroleum reservoir and the adjacent geologic systems. The r...

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Main Author: Kazeem A. Lawal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-11-01
Series:Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13202-019-00792-5
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spelling doaj-05971251291c42c0a5c60c7ce328d3192020-11-25T04:02:09ZengSpringerOpenJournal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology2190-05582190-05662019-11-011041565157410.1007/s13202-019-00792-5Applicability of heat-exchanger theory to estimate heat losses to surrounding formations in a thermal floodKazeem A. Lawal0FIRST Exploration and Petroleum Development Company (FIRST E&P)Abstract Heat losses to cap and base rocks undermine the performance of a thermal flood. As a contribution to this subject, this paper investigates the applicability of the principles of heat exchanger to characterise heat losses between a petroleum reservoir and the adjacent geologic systems. The reservoir-boundary interface is conceptualised as a conductive wall through which the reservoir and adjacent formations exchange heat, but not mass. For a conduction-dominated process, the heat-transport equations are formulated and solved for both adiabatic and non-adiabatic conditions. Simulations performed on a field-scale example show that the rate of heating a petroleum reservoir is sensitive to the type of fluids saturating the adjoining geologic systems, as well as the characteristics of the cap and base rocks of the subject reservoir. Adiabatic and semi-infinite reservoir assumptions are found to be poor approximations for the examples presented. Validation of the proposed model against an existing model was satisfactory; however, remaining differences in performances are rationalised. Besides demonstrating the applicability of heat-exchanger theory to describe thermal losses in petroleum reservoirs, a novelty of this work is that it explicitly accounts for the effects of the reservoir-overburden and reservoir-underburden interfaces, as well as the characteristics of the fluid in the adjacent strata on reservoir heating. These and other findings should aid the design and management of thermal floods.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13202-019-00792-5Thermal floodCap rock heat lossesBase rock heat lossesHeat exchangersConductive heating
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kazeem A. Lawal
spellingShingle Kazeem A. Lawal
Applicability of heat-exchanger theory to estimate heat losses to surrounding formations in a thermal flood
Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology
Thermal flood
Cap rock heat losses
Base rock heat losses
Heat exchangers
Conductive heating
author_facet Kazeem A. Lawal
author_sort Kazeem A. Lawal
title Applicability of heat-exchanger theory to estimate heat losses to surrounding formations in a thermal flood
title_short Applicability of heat-exchanger theory to estimate heat losses to surrounding formations in a thermal flood
title_full Applicability of heat-exchanger theory to estimate heat losses to surrounding formations in a thermal flood
title_fullStr Applicability of heat-exchanger theory to estimate heat losses to surrounding formations in a thermal flood
title_full_unstemmed Applicability of heat-exchanger theory to estimate heat losses to surrounding formations in a thermal flood
title_sort applicability of heat-exchanger theory to estimate heat losses to surrounding formations in a thermal flood
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology
issn 2190-0558
2190-0566
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract Heat losses to cap and base rocks undermine the performance of a thermal flood. As a contribution to this subject, this paper investigates the applicability of the principles of heat exchanger to characterise heat losses between a petroleum reservoir and the adjacent geologic systems. The reservoir-boundary interface is conceptualised as a conductive wall through which the reservoir and adjacent formations exchange heat, but not mass. For a conduction-dominated process, the heat-transport equations are formulated and solved for both adiabatic and non-adiabatic conditions. Simulations performed on a field-scale example show that the rate of heating a petroleum reservoir is sensitive to the type of fluids saturating the adjoining geologic systems, as well as the characteristics of the cap and base rocks of the subject reservoir. Adiabatic and semi-infinite reservoir assumptions are found to be poor approximations for the examples presented. Validation of the proposed model against an existing model was satisfactory; however, remaining differences in performances are rationalised. Besides demonstrating the applicability of heat-exchanger theory to describe thermal losses in petroleum reservoirs, a novelty of this work is that it explicitly accounts for the effects of the reservoir-overburden and reservoir-underburden interfaces, as well as the characteristics of the fluid in the adjacent strata on reservoir heating. These and other findings should aid the design and management of thermal floods.
topic Thermal flood
Cap rock heat losses
Base rock heat losses
Heat exchangers
Conductive heating
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13202-019-00792-5
work_keys_str_mv AT kazeemalawal applicabilityofheatexchangertheorytoestimateheatlossestosurroundingformationsinathermalflood
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