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dc.contributor.authorAl-Abri, Abdullah
dc.contributor.authorSidiq, Hiwa
dc.contributor.authorAmin, Robert
dc.date.accessioned2017-01-30T15:14:20Z
dc.date.available2017-01-30T15:14:20Z
dc.date.created2011-03-29T20:01:40Z
dc.date.issued2010
dc.identifier.citationAl-Abri, Abdullah and Sidiq, Hiwa and Amin, Robert. 2009. Enhanced Natural Gas and Condensate Recovery by Injection of Pure SCCO2, Pure CH4 and their Mixtures: Experimental Investigation, SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition, Oct 04 2009, pp. 1-13. New Orleans, USA: Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE).
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/44478
dc.identifier.doi10.2118/124145-MS
dc.description.abstract

This paper quantitatively investigates the fractional condensate recovery and relative permeability following supercritical carbon dioxide (SCCO2) injection, methane injection and the injection of their mixtures; and compositionally-sensitive reservoir gas relative permeability following SCCO2 injection. A high pressure high temperature experimental laboratory was established to simulate reservoir conditions and to perform relative permeability measurements on sandstone cores. All tests were made at measured miscible conditions of 5900psi, 95-160oC and constant flow velocity inside the cores of 10cm/h. Two sequences of coreflooding experiments were employed to replicate the displacement of reservoir gas by pure SCCO2 injection, and the displacement of condensate by injection of different SCCO2-methane concentrations. This work is part of an integrated enhanced gas and condensate recovery project conducted for a local reservoir in Western Australia.The results provide valuable insights into gas and condensate recovery following SCCO2 injection with various methane impurities. The results demonstrate that SCCO2 injection appears to offer less capillary instabilities and better mobility ratios resulting in a delayed breakthrough and favorable condensate sweep efficiency (79% recovery and 0.62 PV BT); as opposed to the injection of SCCO2-methane mixtures, or pure methane injection (45% recovery and 0.27 PV BT). Further, the relative permeability curves to condensate improve following SCCO2 injection due to decrease in condensate-to-gas viscosity ratio (curves cross at 58% gas saturation with SCCO2 injection compared to 24% gas saturation with methane injection). On the gas-gas side, experiments confirm that the greater the methane concentration in the reservoir gas (i.e. less CO2 contamination) the better relative permeability and sweep efficiency data become at the flooding temperatures and pressures (curves cross at 40% SCCO2 saturation when 90% methane is present in the reservoir compared to less than 5% SCCO2 saturation when only 25% methane is present in the porous medium). These data will help the operators develop operational and design strategies for their current and future EOR projects, as well as to input parameters for full-field simulation practices.

dc.publisherSociety of Petroleum Engineers
dc.titleEnhanced Natural Gas and Condensate Recovery by Injection of Pure SCCO2, Pure CH4 and their Mixtures: Experimental Investigation
dc.typeJournal Article
dcterms.source.volume1
dcterms.source.issn18755100
dcterms.source.titleSPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition
curtin.note

Copyright © 2009 Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE)

curtin.departmentDepartment of Petroleum Engineering
curtin.accessStatusFulltext not available


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