A New Method for Treating Wells in Reservoir Simulation

A new method for formulating finite difference equations for reservoir simulation has been developed. It can be applied throughout the entire simulated reservoir or to local segments. When applied to cells containing vertical, fully penetrating, straight-line wells in a homogeneous reservoir, the re...

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Main Author: Gessel, Gregory M.
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1405
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2404&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-24042021-09-01T05:01:21Z A New Method for Treating Wells in Reservoir Simulation Gessel, Gregory M. A new method for formulating finite difference equations for reservoir simulation has been developed. It can be applied throughout the entire simulated reservoir or to local segments. When applied to cells containing vertical, fully penetrating, straight-line wells in a homogeneous reservoir, the resulting equations are equivalent to Peaceman's classical well equations used in most reservoir simulators today. However, when the new finite difference equations are applied to both the well-containing cells, and their neighbors, the accuracy of the simulation improves substantially. The method produces still better accuracy results when applied throughout the reservoir. Unlike the Peaceman correction, the new method also applies to reservoirs containing wells of complex geometry. This includes wells that are closely spaced and wells near reservoir faults and external boundaries. The method results from the incorporation of approximate analytical expressions for the pressure into the reservoir simulator's finite difference equations. By incorporating the “physics” of the flow into the solution, rather than relying on polynomial-based finite difference equations based on Taylor's series, as is usually done, solution accuracy improves. Accuracy is particularly improved around the wells where near-singularities in the pressure occur. Polynomials are incapable of accurately representing singularities. 2007-06-27T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1405 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2404&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive reservoir simulation well peaceman Chemical Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic reservoir
simulation
well
peaceman
Chemical Engineering
spellingShingle reservoir
simulation
well
peaceman
Chemical Engineering
Gessel, Gregory M.
A New Method for Treating Wells in Reservoir Simulation
description A new method for formulating finite difference equations for reservoir simulation has been developed. It can be applied throughout the entire simulated reservoir or to local segments. When applied to cells containing vertical, fully penetrating, straight-line wells in a homogeneous reservoir, the resulting equations are equivalent to Peaceman's classical well equations used in most reservoir simulators today. However, when the new finite difference equations are applied to both the well-containing cells, and their neighbors, the accuracy of the simulation improves substantially. The method produces still better accuracy results when applied throughout the reservoir. Unlike the Peaceman correction, the new method also applies to reservoirs containing wells of complex geometry. This includes wells that are closely spaced and wells near reservoir faults and external boundaries. The method results from the incorporation of approximate analytical expressions for the pressure into the reservoir simulator's finite difference equations. By incorporating the “physics” of the flow into the solution, rather than relying on polynomial-based finite difference equations based on Taylor's series, as is usually done, solution accuracy improves. Accuracy is particularly improved around the wells where near-singularities in the pressure occur. Polynomials are incapable of accurately representing singularities.
author Gessel, Gregory M.
author_facet Gessel, Gregory M.
author_sort Gessel, Gregory M.
title A New Method for Treating Wells in Reservoir Simulation
title_short A New Method for Treating Wells in Reservoir Simulation
title_full A New Method for Treating Wells in Reservoir Simulation
title_fullStr A New Method for Treating Wells in Reservoir Simulation
title_full_unstemmed A New Method for Treating Wells in Reservoir Simulation
title_sort new method for treating wells in reservoir simulation
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2007
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1405
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2404&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT gesselgregorym anewmethodfortreatingwellsinreservoirsimulation
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