4.3 Article

Near-well upscaling for three-phase flows

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL GEOSCIENCES
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages 55-73

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10596-011-9252-4

Keywords

Upscaling; Reservoir simulation; Subsurface flow; Near well; Three-phase flow; Oil-gas-water; Multiscale modeling

Funding

  1. INPEX Corporation
  2. Stanford University Reservoir Simulation Research Consortium (SUPRI-B)

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Large-scale flow models constructed using standard coarsening procedures may not accurately resolve detailed near-well effects. Such effects are often important to capture, however, as the interaction of the well with the formation can have a dominant impact on process performance. In this work, a near-well upscaling procedure, which provides three-phase well-block properties, is developed and tested. The overall approach represents an extension of a recently developed oil-gas upscaling procedure and entails the use of local well computations (over a region referred to as the local well model (LWM)) along with a gradient-based optimization procedure to minimize the mismatch between fine and coarse-scale well rates, for oil, gas, and water, over the LWM. The gradients required for the minimization are computed efficiently through solution of adjoint equations. The LWM boundary conditions are determined using an iterative local-global procedure. With this approach, pressures and saturations computed during a global coarse-scale simulation are interpolated onto LWM boundaries and then used as boundary conditions for the fine-scale LWM computations. In addition to extending the overall approach to the three-phase case, this work also introduces new treatments that provide improved accuracy in cases with significant flux from the gas cap into the well block. The near-well multiphase upscaling method is applied to heterogeneous reservoir models, with production from vertical and horizontal wells. Simulation results illustrate that the method is able to accurately capture key near-well effects and to provide predictions for component production rates that are in close agreement with reference fine-scale results. The level of accuracy of the procedure is shown to be significantly higher than that of a standard approach which uses only upscaled single-phase flow parameters.

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