- Docente: Guido Gottardi
- Credits: 6
- SSD: ING-IND/30
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LS) in Environmental and Territory Engineering (cod. 0450)
Learning outcomes
The learning outcome of this course is to give the students the
fundamental knowledges of the study of hyrocarbon oil and gas
reservoirs, to design their development and rational exploitation.
For completion of the matter of this course the students are
suggested to attend the course of Hydrocarbon Production and
Transport.
Course contents
Hydrocarbon reservoirs: conditions for the existence of an oil
or gas reservoirs, sedimentology, generation of hydrocarbons and
their migrations,
hydrocarbon traps, temperature and pressure in the reservoir.
Reservoir fluids: composition, phase behavior of hydrocarbons
systems under reservoir conditions, thermodynamic properties of
reservoir fluids, volumetric behavior of gases and condensates,
volumetric behavior and viscosity of oil, viscosity of oil with
dissolved gas, correlations for estimating the solubility of gas
into oil, the formation volume factor, the compressibility of oil,
property of reservoir water.Reservoir rocks: core logs, porosity,
compressibility, wettability, basic concepts of capillary, drenage
and imbibition, capillary pressure curves, conversion of laboratory
capillary pressure curves to reservoir conditions, calculation of
the average capillary pressure curve for a reservoir –Leverett
J-Function, porosity, absolute permeability. Dynamic properties of
rocks: porosity, permeability, relative permeability curves
(gas-oil, and oil- water), effective permeability, calculation of
the average relative permeability curve in a sedimentary unit, the
use of statistical analysis in reservoir zonation.Evaluation of oil
and gas reserves: definitions, classification of reserves according
to production status, basic data for the volumetric calculations of
reserves, reservoir area, net pay thickness, porosity and average
porosity, water saturation and average water saturation, oil volume
factor, gas volume factor, recovery factor. Classification of
Fields in terms of hydrocarbon volume.Radial flow through porous
media for slightly compressible fluids: equation of single flow
radial flow, linearisation of the diffusivity equation, horizontal
radial flow, dimensionless form of the radial diffusivity equation
of fluid of constant compressibility, solution of the diffusivity
equation for transient, pseudo steady-state and steady state flow,
treatment of real well, skin effect. The principle of
superimposition applied to the solution of the diffusivity
equation.Interpretation of production tests in oil wells:
calculation of the non dimensional pressure, time and radius,
constant rate drawdown tests, multi-rate pressure drawdown tests,
use of type curves, skin effect due to well geometry, interference
testing between wells. Interpretation of production tests in gas
wells: the real gas pseudo pressure, linearisation of the
diffusivity equation for real gas , dimensionless form of the
diffusivity equation for gas, non-Darcy flow, the radial horizontal
flow of gas toward the well, transient flow, pseudo-steady flow,
steady flow. General solution for the diffusivity equation for gas,
gas well deliverability testing, the empirical back pressure test,
isochronal test, multi-rate drawdown test, pressure buildup
test.The influx of water into the reservoir by the following
methods: Schilthuis, Huntus , global equation, Van Everdingen and
Hurst, and Fetkovich .Material balance equation and prediction of
the gas production as function of time for : dry gas reservoirs in
contact with an aquifer and for condensate reservoirs. Pressure
maintenance by water injection or gas recycling in gas condensate
reservoirs. Calculation of the volumetric and phase behavior of a
condensate reservoir using EOS. General material balance equation
for oil reservoirs, drive indices , material balance for
undersaturated oil and saturated oil reservoirs without gas
cap.Immiscible displacement in homogeneous porous media: the
fractional flow equation, the Bukley-Leverett displacement
equation, fraction flow curves concave downward, upward, and
S-shaped.Calculation of the average saturation behind the
displacing front by Welge's equation. Calculation of oil recovery
as function of time. The effect of oil viscosity and flow rate on
displacement process.
Factor influencing oil recovery by water injection: microscopic
displacement efficiency, volumetric efficiency, vertical invasion
efficiency. Water and gas coning , calculation of the critical flow
rate for water and gas coning. Simulation of reservoir behavior
using numerical modeling: philosophy and methodology behind
numerical modeling, classification of models based on geometry and
classification and number of mobile phases, the continuity
equation, flow equation of single phase flow of slightly
compressible fluid, flow equation for gas fluid, equation for a two
and three phases models without mass exchange among phases, black
oil model for heavy oil reservoirs, volatile oil model,
compositional flow model.Basic principle of Finite Difference (FD)
method for the numerical integration of the partial differential
equations regulating the behavior of the reservoir models: finite
difference analogs for the spatial derivatives of the first and
second order, truncation errors and stability condition for a FD
scheme. Matrix form of a FD scheme. Different grade of implicitness
in the simulation of multiphase models: IMPES (implicit Pressure
Explicit saturations), SEQ (Sequential method), SIMULTANEOUS (full
implicit method).Solution of the sparse linear algebraic equations
by: direct methods (Gauss elimination method, factorization method,
Thomas algorithm for tridiagonal systems), iterative methods
(Jacobi, Gauss Siedel, PSOR , LSOR) methods.
Readings/Bibliography
- GIAN LUIGI CHIERICI, PRINCIPI DI INGEGNERIA DEI GIACIMENTI PETROLIFERI, VOL. 1-2, AGIP, 1991 - L.P. DAKE, FUNDAMENTAL OF RESERVOIR ENGINEERING, ELSEVIER, NEW-YORK, 1978
Teaching methods
The lessons will be of traditional type by demonstrations on the blackboard and numerical exercises on the arguments of the lessons. Numerical FD and FE codes for the simulation of problems of flow and transport of pollutants will be explained and given to the students, with the purpose to accustom the students to the use of codes of calculus which are, at present, largely used in the projection of engineering works.
Assessment methods
The assessment of the profit will be oral and will be done by questions regarding the theoretical knowledge of the subject, and the numerical solutions of simple practical problems.
Teaching tools
Blackboard, overhead projector
Office hours
See the website of Guido Gottardi