Buckley Leverett
Buckley Leverett
Buckley Leverett
TEAM 6.
KEY DEFINITIONS.
DISPLACEMENT EFFICIENCY. IMMISCIBLE DISPLACEMENT. (PHYSICAL ASSUMPTIONS). FRACTIONAL FLOW EQUATION.
DISPLACEMENT EFFICIENCY.
ITS DEFINED LIKE:
THEORY.
EFFICIENCY IS LIMITED BY RESIDUAL OIL SATURATION.
During the sweep of a reservoir, the displacement efficiency coincide with the recovery efficiency (Er), if hypothetically the injected fluid contacted all oil reservoir.
FLUID DYNAMICS
In fluid dynamics, the BuckleyLeverett equation is a transport equation used to model two-phase flow in porous media. The BuckleyLeverett equation or the BuckleyLeverett displacement can be interpreted as a way of incorporating the microscopic effects due to capillary pressure in two-phase flow into Darcy's law.
BASINS
The Buckley-Leverett equation is based on the principle of conservation of mass for linear flow of a fluid (water or gas) through a reservoir at constant total flow rate.
To illustrate the derivation of the Buckley-Leverett equation, the case of water displacing oil is used. Note that the same equation can be developed representing the case for gas displacing oil.
Consider a volume element of a linear reservoir model shown in Figure. Let the thickness of the element be represented as x and located at a distance, x, from the inlet face of the linear model.
A volumetric balance in terms of the water phase (assuming density of water is constant) for the element of the reservoir model can be written as:
fw = fraction of water in flow stream qt = constant total flow rate, t = time interval, days f = porosity, fraction A = cross-sectional area of flow, ft2 Sw = water saturation in the element.
(4)
The fractional flow of water is a function of water saturation only if fluid properties and total flow rate are constant. By application of chain rule, fw = fw (Sw), can be expressed as: (5)
Substituting Eq. (4) into Eq. (5) and re-arranging gives: (6)
For any displacement, the distribution of water saturation is a function of both location and time. This is represented as:
(7)
(8)
Since the focus is on a fixed water saturation. (9) Then equation (8) becomes:
Total flow rate is assumed to be constant, then fractional flow of water is independent of time. Hence:
Also called the frontal advance equation. Integration of Equation yields a useful form of the BuckleyLeverett equation:
x = distance travelled by a fixed saturation in time t, feet qt = total flow rate t = time interval, days f = porosity, fraction A = cross-sectional area of flow, ft2 (dfw/dSw)Sw = slope of the fractional flow curve at Sw.
The equation can be used to calculate the distribution of water saturation as a function of time in a linear reservoir under water injection or aquifer influx.
A barrel of water injected is equal to one barrel of oil displaced or produced, assuming a steady state. Thus requires the assessment of the recovered oil after the emergence of the front (breakthrough). After the irruption into the producing well X2=L If we make = = Number dimensionless porous volumes of water injected
Distribution of water saturation: 1) in the irruption and 2) after the irruption, on a linear injection
At the precise moment of the irruption, Swbt = water saturation in the irruption (breakthrough) = Swf front reaches the production well and reservoir water production increases abruptly from zero to fwbt . This confirms the existence of the shock.
After the irruption (breakthrough), we will produce water and oil together.
Recovered oil is replaced in the porous medium by the injected water. That is equal to the average water saturation in the formation less initial water saturation Swm
GRAPHICAL METHOD
For each value of Sw>Swbt is drawn tangent to the fractional flow curve. This tangent intersects the horizontal line fw=1 at the required point Swm.
If we knew the injected water flow qi, we could estimate the oil recovered vs. time.
In this way we calculate the recoverable oil of a linear, one-dimensional porous medium.
IN THE "BREAKTHROUGH"
The oil recovered when the water breaks into the producing well is still equal to the injected water. Then, remains valid Eq 39. It is useful to express it in dimensionless form. N pD =WiD WiD is the volume of water injected dimensionless respect to pore volume (number of pore volumes of water injected)
This procedure is applied to calculate the time of "breakthrough WiDbt Tbt = injected water flow on qiD is dimensionless volume porary.
The oil recovered is plotted against the water injected in known When injected water flow qi, we could estimate the oil recovered vs. time. This time is calculated from the equation after the "breakthrough".
Thereby calculating the recoverable oil and a porous linear unidimensional. With this value of Np is estimated theoretical displacement efficiency
CONCLUSIONS.
WE THINK THIS IS AN IMPORTANT METHOD TO PREDICT THE BEHAIVOR OF THE FLUIDS INTO THE RESERVOIR, BECAUSE IT ASSUMES SOME IMPORTANT FACTORS THAT WELL PROBABLY NEED IN A SIMULATION OR SOMETHING LIKE THAT.
THANKS A LOT