Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8125567 | Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering | 2018 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Two- and three-dimensional (2-D and 3-D) models and black-oil simulations compare scenarios based on different lithologies, shale drapes, observed grain-size trends, petrophysical properties, and modeling methods. Affected by the shape features of lateral-accretion interfaces, the enrichment areas of remaining oil obviously exhibit morphological characteristics of the echelon. There is little difference in breakthrough time between the “shale drapes” model using porosity as constraint and that using the permeability-distribution function as constraint, but the recovery percentage of the latter model is obviously lower than that of the former. The model in which lateral-accretion beds and units were modeled with the permeability-distribution function as the constraint is about 6% lower than the “shale drapes” model constrained by porosity in recovery percent after 10 years. From the development effect, the injection-production method in which the water-flooding direction is along the dip direction of lateral-accretion surfaces is a little better than that in which the water-flooding direction is opposite to the dip direction of intersurfaces.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Economic Geology
Authors
Zhifeng Sun, Chengyan Lin, Peng Zhu, Jiayun Chen,