Proactive control of cresting in homogeneous oil reservoirs: an experimental study

Abstract This paper sets out to investigate experimentally the use of electromagnetic valves in controlling production of water during cresting from homogeneous non-fractured thick-oil and thin-oil reservoirs, based on the principle of capillarity and breakthrough time. A time half the initial break...

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Main Authors: H. N. Akangbou, M. Burby, G. Nasr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-06-01
Series:Petroleum Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12182-017-0167-0
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spelling doaj-bac29bd1d0c94746a3b1fc1e5e2a0ff22020-11-24T22:17:11ZengSpringerOpenPetroleum Science1672-51071995-82262017-06-0114475576410.1007/s12182-017-0167-0Proactive control of cresting in homogeneous oil reservoirs: an experimental studyH. N. Akangbou0M. Burby1G. Nasr2Petroleum Technology and Spray Research Groups, School of Computing Science and Engineering, University of SalfordPetroleum Technology and Spray Research Groups, School of Computing Science and Engineering, University of SalfordPetroleum Technology and Spray Research Groups, School of Computing Science and Engineering, University of SalfordAbstract This paper sets out to investigate experimentally the use of electromagnetic valves in controlling production of water during cresting from homogeneous non-fractured thick-oil and thin-oil reservoirs, based on the principle of capillarity and breakthrough time. A time half the initial breakthrough times was preset for the electromagnetic valve to close. The valve closed almost immediately at the set time thereby shutting oil production temporarily, causing the water and gas height levels to recede by gravity and capillarity with receding reservoir pressure. The efficiency of this technique was compared with an uncontrolled simulation case, in terms of cumulative oil, oil recovery and water produced at the same overall production time. From the results obtained, higher percentages in oil produced and water reduction were observed in the cases controlled proactively, with a 3.6% increase in oil produced and water reduction of 10.0% for thick-oil rim reservoirs, whereas only a small increment in oil produced (0.7%) and a lower water reduction of 1.03% were observed for the thin-oil rim reservoirs. Hence, the effectiveness of the cresting control procedure depends on the oil column height of the reservoir.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12182-017-0167-0HomogeneityCapillarityCrestingBreakthrough time
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author H. N. Akangbou
M. Burby
G. Nasr
spellingShingle H. N. Akangbou
M. Burby
G. Nasr
Proactive control of cresting in homogeneous oil reservoirs: an experimental study
Petroleum Science
Homogeneity
Capillarity
Cresting
Breakthrough time
author_facet H. N. Akangbou
M. Burby
G. Nasr
author_sort H. N. Akangbou
title Proactive control of cresting in homogeneous oil reservoirs: an experimental study
title_short Proactive control of cresting in homogeneous oil reservoirs: an experimental study
title_full Proactive control of cresting in homogeneous oil reservoirs: an experimental study
title_fullStr Proactive control of cresting in homogeneous oil reservoirs: an experimental study
title_full_unstemmed Proactive control of cresting in homogeneous oil reservoirs: an experimental study
title_sort proactive control of cresting in homogeneous oil reservoirs: an experimental study
publisher SpringerOpen
series Petroleum Science
issn 1672-5107
1995-8226
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Abstract This paper sets out to investigate experimentally the use of electromagnetic valves in controlling production of water during cresting from homogeneous non-fractured thick-oil and thin-oil reservoirs, based on the principle of capillarity and breakthrough time. A time half the initial breakthrough times was preset for the electromagnetic valve to close. The valve closed almost immediately at the set time thereby shutting oil production temporarily, causing the water and gas height levels to recede by gravity and capillarity with receding reservoir pressure. The efficiency of this technique was compared with an uncontrolled simulation case, in terms of cumulative oil, oil recovery and water produced at the same overall production time. From the results obtained, higher percentages in oil produced and water reduction were observed in the cases controlled proactively, with a 3.6% increase in oil produced and water reduction of 10.0% for thick-oil rim reservoirs, whereas only a small increment in oil produced (0.7%) and a lower water reduction of 1.03% were observed for the thin-oil rim reservoirs. Hence, the effectiveness of the cresting control procedure depends on the oil column height of the reservoir.
topic Homogeneity
Capillarity
Cresting
Breakthrough time
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12182-017-0167-0
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AT mburby proactivecontrolofcrestinginhomogeneousoilreservoirsanexperimentalstudy
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