3-Oil and Gas Recovery Techniques
3-Oil and Gas Recovery Techniques
3-Oil and Gas Recovery Techniques
• Understanding of the physical properties of the rock and its interaction with the hydrocarbon system
is very important to be able to evaluate performance of a reservoir.
• Rock properties are determined by performing laboratory tests on cores samples from the reservoir.
• Important rock properties that can determine the quality and distribution of hydrocarbon are:
• Knowledge of reservoir fluid types and their properties is also very crucial as they can
determine the volumetric behavior of hydrocarbon reservoirs.
• The properties are determined from laboratory experiments performed on
samples of actual reservoir fluids.
• In the absence of experimentally measured properties, empirical correlations are used.
• A hydrocarbon reservoir may be with both gas and oil or with one of them and water.
• Below are the main reservoir fluid properties:
➢ Specific gravity
➢ Density
Δ𝑉
➢ Isothermal compressibility coefficient - Δ𝑃
➢Formation volume factor - the ratio of the volume of reservoir fluid at the
prevailing reservoir temperature and pressure to the volume at standard
conditions.
➢ Viscosity - the internal resistance of the fluid to flow
Learning Outcomes
1. Describe the flow of fluid through porous media.
2. Define the three oil recovery methods.
• Flow in porous media is a very complex phenomenon and as such cannot be described as
explicitly as flow through pipes or conduits. It is rather easy to measure the length and
diameter of a pipe and compute its flow capacity as a function of pressure; in porous media,
however, flow is different in that there are no clear-cut flow paths that lend themselves to
measurement.
• The flow of fluid in porous media is affected by rock properties (porosity and permeability),
fluid properties (compressibility and viscosity).
• Darcy equation:
• Where the pressure gradient is the energy that determines the flow of fluid
to the wellbore and it is described for linear flow as:
• Reservoir engineers are required to determine the best oil recovery methods (primary, secondary, and
tertiary) that extend the life of reservoir and recover higher percentage of original oil in place.
• Original oil in place is the total estimated amount of oil in reservoir, which can not be fully recovered.
• The ratio of producible oil to the original oil in place is called recovery factor.
• The average world wide oil recovery is 35%, which leaves >60% of the oil in the reservoir. Thus, the need
to implement other recovery methods to increase the recovery factor.
• Primary oil recovery describes the production of hydrocarbons under the natural driving mechanisms
present in the reservoir without supplementary help from injected fluids such as gas or water. (like a
carbonated bottle drink)
• Secondary oil recovery refers to the additional recovery that results from the conventional methods of
water injection and immiscible gas injection.
• Tertiary (enhanced) oil recovery is that additional recovery over and above what could be
recovered by primary and secondary recovery methods.
Learning Outcome:
• List and describe the five primary recovery methods.
2. Depletion drive
• Also known as solution gas drive, dissolved gas drive, internal gas drive
• In this type drive mechanism, the main source of energy is from gas liberation
from the crude oil and subsequent expansion of solution gas as the reservoir
pressure reduces.
• The ultimate recovery vary as 5 to 30%.
4. Water drive
• It is due to the movement of water into the pore space that was originally filled
with oil, replacing and displacing it to the producing wells.
• The ultimate recovery is expected to range from 35% to 75%
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5b
Learning Outcome:
• Describe and list two secondary recovery methods
https://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=Y4Ipuo1IBdk INTRO TO OIL AND GAS
TERTIARY RECOVERY METHODS PEB1012
Learning Outcomes:
• Define EOR method
• List and describe the three main EOR methods
• Thermal recovery such as Steam flooding is the most widely used and profitable
enhanced oil recovery technique for heavy crude oils.
• The process involves the injection of steam generated at the surface or downhole
continuously or in cycles
• Recoveries from steam flooding are typically in the range of 50 to 60% OOIP, while the
ultimate recovery from cycle steam is lower in the range of 10 to 25% OOIP.
• Steam costs are very high and can amount to up to 50% of the value of the produced oil.
• Gas is injected above Minimum Miscible Pressure such that gas becomes miscible in
oil in the formation. Viscosity of oil is reduced providing more efficient miscible
displacement. The process involves the injection of steam generated at the surface
or downhole continuously or in cycles
• Gas is injected below minimum miscible pressure such that it sweeps the oil in
front of it towards the production wells.
• This process can also be used to mitigate permanently the CO2 produced from
Power Plants
• Chemical EOR involves a variety of techniques used to mainly to reduce the interfacial tension and to
modify the mobility of the aqueous phase during oil displacement.
• Chemical EOR methods utilize:
• Surfactant
• Polymer
• Alkaline
• Alkaline -Surfactant –Polymer (ASP)
• Purposes
1.To reduce the interfacial tension
2.To improve the flooding efficiency
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8cKOQiKm7s
Learningoutcomes:
• Describe reservoir management.
• List objectives of reservoir modeling and simulations.
QUESTIONS?