Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Implementation and Benefits from Novel Algorithm for Complex Fractured Carbonate Reservoirs in Abu Dhabi Onshore Field

View through CrossRef
Abstract Objectives/Scope This work outlines the implementation and evaluation of a novel reservoir simulation algorithm within a complex, highly heterogeneous, and fractured carbonate reservoir situated in the Middle East. The reservoir, with over 40 years of production history and hundreds of wells, exhibits confirmed production from both matrix and fracture zones, with fracture lineaments modelled based on seismic and image logs. Currently the reservoir is modelled as dual porosity and dual permeability with the reservoir simulation employs a fine grid comprising 42 million matrix cells. Methods, Procedures, Process Originally, the fine-grid model was evaluated using the commonly used conventional reservoir simulation solver which is Fully Implicit (FI) that results in high running time and was not capable of handling the complexity, size, and challenges of the reservoir. A state-of-art solver technology known as Multiscale solver was tested on this high-resolution dual porosity dual permeability model to understand the difference in running time and performance compared to the conventional solver. Results, Observations, Conclusions The Multiscale solver shows significant performance enhancements, achieving an impressive fourfold acceleration in simulation time compared to conventional solver without any hardware update. This acceleration not only facilitates the exploration of fine-scale models to enhance reservoir management quality and produce more reliable forecast plans but also expedites the identification of uncertain parameters for improved reservoir understanding and characterization, thereby accelerating the history matching process. Novel/Additional Information The Multiscale solver is based on an alternative formulation of the reservoir equations, known as the Sequential Fully Implicit (SFI) formulation. It divides the displacement process into two parts: one system of equations for the reservoir pressure, and another system of equations for the transport of fluid components (in other words, the phase saturation / molar fractions). The pressure equations are near elliptic. It can be difficult to solve in parallel because of the requirement for global communication and sophisticated linear solvers. In contrast, the transport equations are near hyperbolic and strongly non-convex. But the linear systems are usually easier to solve in parallel, and simpler linear solvers can be applied efficiently. By tailoring the solution process to each equation and the interactions between them, the SFI formulation can perform better than the conventional Fully Implicit method. The improvements in the simulation solvers played an important role in running high-resolution models that capture geological concepts and high degree of heterogeneity that were not able to capture before. This paper sheds light on this novel solver from both theoretical and application points which is considered a major step change in reservoir modeling.
Title: Implementation and Benefits from Novel Algorithm for Complex Fractured Carbonate Reservoirs in Abu Dhabi Onshore Field
Description:
Abstract Objectives/Scope This work outlines the implementation and evaluation of a novel reservoir simulation algorithm within a complex, highly heterogeneous, and fractured carbonate reservoir situated in the Middle East.
The reservoir, with over 40 years of production history and hundreds of wells, exhibits confirmed production from both matrix and fracture zones, with fracture lineaments modelled based on seismic and image logs.
Currently the reservoir is modelled as dual porosity and dual permeability with the reservoir simulation employs a fine grid comprising 42 million matrix cells.
Methods, Procedures, Process Originally, the fine-grid model was evaluated using the commonly used conventional reservoir simulation solver which is Fully Implicit (FI) that results in high running time and was not capable of handling the complexity, size, and challenges of the reservoir.
A state-of-art solver technology known as Multiscale solver was tested on this high-resolution dual porosity dual permeability model to understand the difference in running time and performance compared to the conventional solver.
Results, Observations, Conclusions The Multiscale solver shows significant performance enhancements, achieving an impressive fourfold acceleration in simulation time compared to conventional solver without any hardware update.
This acceleration not only facilitates the exploration of fine-scale models to enhance reservoir management quality and produce more reliable forecast plans but also expedites the identification of uncertain parameters for improved reservoir understanding and characterization, thereby accelerating the history matching process.
Novel/Additional Information The Multiscale solver is based on an alternative formulation of the reservoir equations, known as the Sequential Fully Implicit (SFI) formulation.
It divides the displacement process into two parts: one system of equations for the reservoir pressure, and another system of equations for the transport of fluid components (in other words, the phase saturation / molar fractions).
The pressure equations are near elliptic.
It can be difficult to solve in parallel because of the requirement for global communication and sophisticated linear solvers.
In contrast, the transport equations are near hyperbolic and strongly non-convex.
But the linear systems are usually easier to solve in parallel, and simpler linear solvers can be applied efficiently.
By tailoring the solution process to each equation and the interactions between them, the SFI formulation can perform better than the conventional Fully Implicit method.
The improvements in the simulation solvers played an important role in running high-resolution models that capture geological concepts and high degree of heterogeneity that were not able to capture before.
This paper sheds light on this novel solver from both theoretical and application points which is considered a major step change in reservoir modeling.

Related Results

Source Rocks of the Thamama Hydrocarbon in Abu Dhabi
Source Rocks of the Thamama Hydrocarbon in Abu Dhabi
Abstract More than 80% of Abu Dhabi oil reserves are accumulated in the Thamama reservoirs. However, its source rock locations, thickness and richness distributions ...
Bedding Corridors as Migration Pathways in Abu Dhabi Fields
Bedding Corridors as Migration Pathways in Abu Dhabi Fields
Abstract Hydrocarbon migration pathways control the distribution of oil and gas in Abu Dhabi sedimentary basins and therefore it is one of the most important and con...
Tectonic Map of Abu Dhabi, UAE
Tectonic Map of Abu Dhabi, UAE
Abstract The study of tectonics deals with the broad architecture of the outer part of the Earth, the age, relationship, evolution of regional structural, deformatio...
Extending Polymer Flooding Towards High-Temperature and High-Salinity Carbonate Reservoirs
Extending Polymer Flooding Towards High-Temperature and High-Salinity Carbonate Reservoirs
Abstract Polymer flooding is a mature EOR technique successfully applied in both sandstone and carbonate reservoirs. ADNOC has developed a new EOR roadmap with the o...
FCL-a Computerized Well-log Interpretation Process For the Evaluation of Naturally Fractured Reservoirs
FCL-a Computerized Well-log Interpretation Process For the Evaluation of Naturally Fractured Reservoirs
Abstract The Fracture Completion Log (FCL) is a computerized process which allows the determination of primary and secondary porosity and water saturation in the ...
Carbonate Depositional Sequences and Systems Tracts—Responses of Carbonate Platforms to Relative Sea-Level Changes
Carbonate Depositional Sequences and Systems Tracts—Responses of Carbonate Platforms to Relative Sea-Level Changes
Abstract Standard carbonate facies models are widely used to interpret paleoenvironments, but they do not address how carbonate platforms are affected by relative...
Development Strategy Optimization and Application for Fractured-Vuggy Carbonate Gas Condensate Reservoirs
Development Strategy Optimization and Application for Fractured-Vuggy Carbonate Gas Condensate Reservoirs
Abstract Naturally fractured-vuggy carbonate gas condensate reservoirs in China have some distinctive characteristics: deep buried depth, multi-scale fractures, vugs...
Transient Pressure Behavior Of Naturally Fractured Reservoirs
Transient Pressure Behavior Of Naturally Fractured Reservoirs
Abstract The naturally fractured reservoir model presented by Warren and Root was extended to improve analysis of field data and to account for practical wellbore...

Back to Top