Simulation study on the effect of gravity ratio on viscous fingering and gravity segregation in water-alternate-gas process

The recovery of residual oil using Carbon Dioxide (CO2) flooding has received great attention over worldwide to maintain and prolong oil supply. The major problem in applying this process is to control the mobility of CO2 due to its low viscosity as compared to oil. Therefore, water is suggested to...

全面介紹

Saved in:
書目詳細資料
主要作者: Mohammad Khir, Zahrah
格式: Thesis
語言:English
出版: 2012
主題:
在線閱讀:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/101847/1/ZahrahMohammadKhirMSChE2012.pdf
標簽: 添加標簽
沒有標簽, 成為第一個標記此記錄!
id my-utm-ep.101847
record_format uketd_dc
spelling my-utm-ep.1018472023-07-22T02:56:47Z Simulation study on the effect of gravity ratio on viscous fingering and gravity segregation in water-alternate-gas process 2012 Mohammad Khir, Zahrah Q Science (General) TP Chemical technology The recovery of residual oil using Carbon Dioxide (CO2) flooding has received great attention over worldwide to maintain and prolong oil supply. The major problem in applying this process is to control the mobility of CO2 due to its low viscosity as compared to oil. Therefore, water is suggested to be injected alternately with gas to overcome the mobility problem. The use of Water Alternate Gas (WAG) is simulated using ECLIPSE software to validate the experimental result on the effect of Viscous Gravity Ratio (VGR), which is the ratio of horizontal force to vertical force on gravity segregation and viscous fingering. The study also looks into effect of different perforation injection strategy on ultimate oil recovery. The simulation results agree with experimental result by Nguyen (2000) where the viscous fingering is significant in high VGR value while the gravity segregation is significant at low VGR value. The ultimate oil recovery is found increase with VGR value increase, where at VGR 4.5, 33 and 300, the ultimate recovery is 41.4%, 77.9% and 80.5%. With different perforation injection strategy, ultimate oil recovery is found to be highest when water injection is at top and gas injection is at bottom, and at high VGR, where the ultimate recovery is 83.8% at VGR 300. 2012 Thesis http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/101847/ http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/101847/1/ZahrahMohammadKhirMSChE2012.pdf application/pdf en public http://dms.library.utm.my:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:148950 masters Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Faculty of Engineering - School of Chemical & Energy Engineering Faculty of Engineering - School of Chemical & Energy Engineering
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
collection UTM Institutional Repository
language English
topic Q Science (General)
TP Chemical technology
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
TP Chemical technology
Mohammad Khir, Zahrah
Simulation study on the effect of gravity ratio on viscous fingering and gravity segregation in water-alternate-gas process
description The recovery of residual oil using Carbon Dioxide (CO2) flooding has received great attention over worldwide to maintain and prolong oil supply. The major problem in applying this process is to control the mobility of CO2 due to its low viscosity as compared to oil. Therefore, water is suggested to be injected alternately with gas to overcome the mobility problem. The use of Water Alternate Gas (WAG) is simulated using ECLIPSE software to validate the experimental result on the effect of Viscous Gravity Ratio (VGR), which is the ratio of horizontal force to vertical force on gravity segregation and viscous fingering. The study also looks into effect of different perforation injection strategy on ultimate oil recovery. The simulation results agree with experimental result by Nguyen (2000) where the viscous fingering is significant in high VGR value while the gravity segregation is significant at low VGR value. The ultimate oil recovery is found increase with VGR value increase, where at VGR 4.5, 33 and 300, the ultimate recovery is 41.4%, 77.9% and 80.5%. With different perforation injection strategy, ultimate oil recovery is found to be highest when water injection is at top and gas injection is at bottom, and at high VGR, where the ultimate recovery is 83.8% at VGR 300.
format Thesis
qualification_level Master's degree
author Mohammad Khir, Zahrah
author_facet Mohammad Khir, Zahrah
author_sort Mohammad Khir, Zahrah
title Simulation study on the effect of gravity ratio on viscous fingering and gravity segregation in water-alternate-gas process
title_short Simulation study on the effect of gravity ratio on viscous fingering and gravity segregation in water-alternate-gas process
title_full Simulation study on the effect of gravity ratio on viscous fingering and gravity segregation in water-alternate-gas process
title_fullStr Simulation study on the effect of gravity ratio on viscous fingering and gravity segregation in water-alternate-gas process
title_full_unstemmed Simulation study on the effect of gravity ratio on viscous fingering and gravity segregation in water-alternate-gas process
title_sort simulation study on the effect of gravity ratio on viscous fingering and gravity segregation in water-alternate-gas process
granting_institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Faculty of Engineering - School of Chemical & Energy Engineering
granting_department Faculty of Engineering - School of Chemical & Energy Engineering
publishDate 2012
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/101847/1/ZahrahMohammadKhirMSChE2012.pdf
_version_ 1776100785849892864