Cold Heavy Oil Production With Sand
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Heavy oil production is a developing technology for extracting heavy oil in industrial quantities. Estimated reserves of heavy oil are over 6 trillion
barrels A barrel or cask is a hollow cylindrical container with a bulging center, longer than it is wide. They are traditionally made of wooden staves and bound by wooden or metal hoops. The word vat is often used for large containers for liquids ...
, three times that of conventional oil and gas. Factors that affect the difficulty of putting reserves into production include permeability,
porosity Porosity or void fraction is a measure of the void (i.e. "empty") spaces in a material, and is a fraction of the volume of voids over the total volume, between 0 and 1, or as a percentage between 0% and 100%. Strictly speaking, some tests measure ...
, depth and pressure. The
density Density (volumetric mass density or specific mass) is the ratio of a substance's mass to its volume. The symbol most often used for density is ''ρ'' (the lower case Greek letter rho), although the Latin letter ''D'' (or ''d'') can also be u ...
and
viscosity Viscosity is a measure of a fluid's rate-dependent drag (physics), resistance to a change in shape or to movement of its neighboring portions relative to one another. For liquids, it corresponds to the informal concept of ''thickness''; for e ...
of the oil is the determining factor. Density and viscosity determine the method of extraction. Oil viscosity varies with temperature and determines the ease of extraction; temperature can be controlled so that oil can be moved without employing additional techniques. Density is more important for refiners since it represents the yield after distillation. However, no relationship links the two. Oil reservoirs exist at varying depths and temperatures. Although viscosity varies significantly with temperature, density is the standard in oilfield classification.
Crude oil Petroleum, also known as crude oil or simply oil, is a naturally occurring, yellowish-black liquid chemical mixture found in geological formations, consisting mainly of hydrocarbons. The term ''petroleum'' refers both to naturally occurring u ...
density is commonly expressed in degrees of
American Petroleum Institute The American Petroleum Institute (API) is the largest U.S. trade association for the oil and natural gas industry. It claims to represent nearly 600 corporations involved in extraction of petroleum, production, oil refinery, refinement, pipeline ...
(API) gravity which are associated with
specific gravity Relative density, also called specific gravity, is a dimensionless quantity defined as the ratio of the density (mass of a unit volume) of a substance to the density of a given reference material. Specific gravity for solids and liquids is nea ...
. The lower the
API gravity The American Petroleum Institute gravity, or API gravity, is a measure of how heavy or light a petroleum liquid is compared to water: if its API gravity is greater than 10, it is lighter and floats on water; if less than 10, it is heavier and sinks ...
, the denser the oil. The API gravity of liquid crude oil ranges from 4º for
tar Tar is a dark brown or black viscous liquid of hydrocarbons and free carbon, obtained from a wide variety of organic materials through destructive distillation. Tar can be produced from coal, wood, petroleum, or peat. "a dark brown or black b ...
rich in
bitumen Bitumen ( , ) is an immensely viscosity, viscous constituent of petroleum. Depending on its exact composition, it can be a sticky, black liquid or an apparently solid mass that behaves as a liquid over very large time scales. In American Engl ...
to condensates that have an API gravity of 70º. Heavy oils are classified between ultra-heavy oils and light oils. They have API gravities ranging between 10º and 20º. Crude oil generated by petroleum source rocks has an API gravity of between 30º and 40º. Crude oil becomes heavy after considerable degradation, after entrapment and during devolatilization. Degradation occurs through chemical and biological processes when oil reservoirs become contaminated by
bacteria Bacteria (; : bacterium) are ubiquitous, mostly free-living organisms often consisting of one Cell (biology), biological cell. They constitute a large domain (biology), domain of Prokaryote, prokaryotic microorganisms. Typically a few micr ...
through subsurface water. The bacteria then break down some
crude oil Petroleum, also known as crude oil or simply oil, is a naturally occurring, yellowish-black liquid chemical mixture found in geological formations, consisting mainly of hydrocarbons. The term ''petroleum'' refers both to naturally occurring u ...
components into heavy components, making it more viscous. Water carries away low
molecular weight A molecule is a group of two or more atoms that are held together by Force, attractive forces known as chemical bonds; depending on context, the term may or may not include ions that satisfy this criterion. In quantum physics, organic chemi ...
hydrocarbons in solution form since they are more soluble. When crude oil is enclosed by a poor quality seal, lighter molecules separate and escape, leaving behind the heavier components through devolatilization. Heavy oils are commonly found in geologically young formations since they are shallow and have less efficient seals, providing the conditions for heavy oil formation.


Terminology


Injection pattern

The injection pattern refers to the arrangement of the production and injector wells to the position, size, and orientation of flow of a reservoir. Injection patterns can vary over the well lifetime by moving the injection well to areas where maximum volume of contact can be achieved.


Geographical heterogeneity

Geological heterogeneity is the spatial distribution of porosity and permeability in a reservoir rock.


Permeability

Permeability depends on the size of the sediment grains that formed the rock and the manner in which they were packed. Permeability is the number of pores, and their interconnectedness in a rock and the existence of different layers in a rock with different permeability is a manifestation of geological heterogeneity. When steam injection takes place, water flows through the more permeable layers, bypassing the oil-rich less permeable layers. This causes low sweep efficiency and early water production with the volume of oil in contact with the water.


Sweep efficiency

Sweep efficiency is the measure of the effectiveness of an EOR method that depends on the total volume of the reservoir that the injected fluid contacts. Sweep efficiency is affected by multiple factors: mobility ratio, directional permeability, cumulative water injected, flood pattern, geological heterogeneity and distribution of pressure between injectors and producers.


Displacement efficiency

Displacement efficiency is the fraction of oil that is recovered from a zone that has been swept by a steam injection or any other displacement method. It is the percentage volume of oil that has been recovered through displacement by an injected fluid or displacing element injected into the reservoir. It is the difference between the volume of the reservoir before the displacement begins and the volume after the displacement has ended.


Amplitude versus offset

Amplitude Versus Offset In geophysics and reflection seismology, amplitude versus offset (AVO) or amplitude variation with offset is the general term for referring to the dependency of the seismic attribute, amplitude, with the distance between the source and receiver ( ...
(AVO) is a technique used in
seismic inversion In geophysics (primarily in oil-and-gas exploration/development), seismic inversion is the process of transforming seismic reflection data into a quantitative rock-property description of a reservoir. Seismic inversion may be pre- or post- stack, ...
to forecast the existence of reservoirs and the rock types surrounding it. Literature reviews and studies incorporate the analysis of AVO and seismic inversion in oil exploration and rock physics studies. Seismic waves projected into oil reservoirs undergoing steam injection give data that show the existence of high values of wave attenuation. This attenuation is usually based on velocity dispersion. Studies show seismic wave reflection between an elastic
overburden In mining, overburden (also called waste or spoil) is the material that lies above an area that lends itself to economical exploitation, such as the rock, soil, and ecosystem that lies above a coal seam or ore body. Overburden is distinct from tai ...
and an equivalent medium have coefficients of reflection that vary with frequency. This variation, depends on the behavior of AVO at the interface. The calculation of synthetic seismographs for the ideal model is carried out using the reflectivity technique for those materials whose velocities and attenuations are frequency dependent. This is usually used since the effects of velocity and attenuation variations are detectable on stacked data. Improved spectral decomposition techniques have shown the frequency dependent parameters more clearly. Saturated rocks, for example, have seismic low frequency effects concerning hydrocarbon-saturated rocks. Furthermore, hydrocarbon-saturated zones have extremely high values of attenuation from the direct quality factor (Q) measurements. Systemic variations of frequencies with offset, where the standard amplitude against the offset is the AVO, disregards attenuation resulting in the use of the purely reflective model. The primary objective is balancing the frequency content of near and far stacks, while correcting for the effect of the attenuation over the overburden. AVO is used to detect the existence of oil reservoirs because of the anomaly evident in oil reservoirs where AVO rising is prominent in oil-rich sediments. It is not as useful in defining the rock formations and permeability properties to improve sweep efficiency. Furthermore, not all oil reservoirs manifest the same anomalies associated with hydrocarbon oil reservoirs since they are sometimes caused by residual hydrocarbons from breached columns of gas.


Seismic analysis

Seismic surveys are the standard method used to map the
Earth's crust Earth's crust is its thick outer shell of rock, referring to less than one percent of the planet's radius and volume. It is the top component of the lithosphere, a solidified division of Earth's layers that includes the crust and the upper ...
. Data from these surveys are used to project detailed information about the types and properties of rocks. Bouncing sound waves off rock formations underneath the surface allows the reflected waves to be analyzed. The time lapses between the incident and reflected waves, as well as the properties of the received wave, provide information about the types of rocks and the possible reserves of petroleum and gas deposits If the geological heterogeneity of a reservoir is known, the injection patterns can be designed to direct the injections to the less permeable layers of the rock that have oil. The challenge is that the reservoir's permeability distribution is hard to determine because heterogeneity changes from one area to another. Therefore, to maximize oil recovery (sweep efficiency), it is necessary to monitor and map the orientation of the permeability layers via seismic surveys. Seismic waves are sent through the rock formations and the time lapse and distortions in the seismic waves are analyzed to map the permeability orientation to enhance the efficient installation of injection patterns.


Oil production techniques

Oil recovery involves three stages of extraction: primary, secondary and tertiary. Since mobility is a ratio of effective permeability and phase viscosity, the productivity of a well is directly proportional to the product of layer thickness of the reservoir rock and mobility.


Primary recovery

Primary recovery uses the pressure build-up of gasses in the reservoir, gravity drainage or a combination of the two. These methods constitute cold production and are commonly referred to as using “natural lift". For conventional oil, cold production has a recovery factor of more than 30 percent while for heavy oil it raises 5 to 10 percent. One variation of the cold production method is called Cold Heavy Oil Production with Sand (CHOPS). CHOPS creates a wormhole or void where oil gets pulled from the surrounding rocks towards the
wellbore A borehole is a narrow shaft bored in the ground, either vertically or horizontally. A borehole may be constructed for many different purposes, including the extraction of water ( drilled water well and tube well), other liquids (such as petr ...
. These methods are termed ''cold production,'' since they are used at reservoir ambient temperature. When natural lift pressure does not generate sufficient underground pressure or when the pressure declines and is no longer sufficient to move oil through the wellbore, primary production has reached its extraction limit, to be succeeded by secondary recovery.


Secondary recovery

Secondary recovery methods also use cold production, but employ external sources of pressure to generate the required internal pressure, still at reservoir temperature. Secondary recovery methods involve the creation of artificial pressure through the injection of elements to create artificial pressure. Water, natural gas or
carbon dioxide Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound with the chemical formula . It is made up of molecules that each have one carbon atom covalent bond, covalently double bonded to two oxygen atoms. It is found in a gas state at room temperature and at norma ...
are the primary injectates. The pressure forces oil up the production well. Over time the artificial pressure loses efficacy because the remaining (heavy) oil is too viscous to flow and is held by
sandstone Sandstone is a Clastic rock#Sedimentary clastic rocks, clastic sedimentary rock composed mainly of grain size, sand-sized (0.0625 to 2 mm) silicate mineral, silicate grains, Cementation (geology), cemented together by another mineral. Sand ...
in the reservoirs. The two cold production recovery methods have a combination recovery factor of between 10 and 20 percent depending on the oil properties and types of rocks.


Tertiary recovery

Tertiary recovery is commonly known as
Enhanced Oil Recovery Enhanced oil recovery (abbreviated EOR), also called tertiary recovery, is the extraction of crude oil from an oil field that cannot be extracted after primary and secondary recovery methods have been completely exhausted. Whereas primary and se ...
(EOR). It is the method of producing oil after the primary and secondary stages have extracted most of the oil in a reserve. Specifically, enhanced oil recovery is used to recover oil trapped in porous rocks and the heavy oil that is too viscous to flow. The three methods for tertiary recovery are: chemical enhanced recovery, thermal enhanced recovery, and miscible enhanced recovery. It involves both thermal and non-thermal methods. Non-thermal methods include the use of chemicals and microbes to loosen trapped heavy oil and carbon dioxide under pressure. However, thermal methods - mainly steam injection - are the most efficient way of reducing viscosity and mobilizing heavy oil.


Steam injection

Among the three main types of steam injection, steam flooding, for example, injects pressurized steam into the injector well where it heats up and forces the more mobile oil out. EOR techniques are expensive due to the required energy and materials. Therefore, the amount of heavy oil to be recovered from a reservoir depends on the economics. Because of this, ERO begins with analysis of the reservoir, rock formations, permeability, pore geometry and viscosity. Including the heterogeneity of a reservoir, these factors influence the success of any recovery method. Overall efficiency is the product of the sweep efficiency and displacement efficiency.


Cyclic steam stimulation

Cyclic Steam Stimulation Steam injection is an increasingly common method of extracting heavy crude oil. Used commercially since the 1960s, it is considered an enhanced oil recovery (EOR) method and is the main type of thermal stimulation of oil reservoirs. There are se ...
(CSS) injects steam through a single well for a period, leaving it to heat up and reduce viscosity, then extracting oil through the same well in alternating cycles of injection and extraction.


Steam-assisted gravity drainage

Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage Steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD; "Sag-D") is an enhanced oil recovery technology for producing heavy crude oil and bitumen. It is an advanced form of steam stimulation in which a pair of horizontal wells are drilled into the oil reservoir, o ...
(SAGD) involves the use of stacked horizontal wells. The top horizontal well is used to inject steam which heats up the surrounding heavy oil which then flows into the bottom horizontal production well. Steam injection consists of two core methods: cyclic steam injection and steam flooding.


Cyclic steam injection

During cyclic steam circulation (CSC), steam is injected into the oil reservoir where the resulting high pressure ruptures the reservoir rocks and heats up the oil, reducing its viscosity. The oil is removed in three stages: injection, soaking and production. High-temperature, high-pressure steam is left in the reservoir from days to weeks so that the heat can be absorbed by the oil. Production then begins. Initially, production is high, but subsides as heat is lost; the process is repeated until it becomes uneconomical to do so. Cyclic steam injection recovers about 10 to 20 percent of the entire oil volume. When this method becomes uneconomical, steam injection is employed. Steam injection is usually used in horizontal and vertical oil wells for reservoirs with viscosity as high as -100,000cP. In cyclic steam injection wells, oil can be both viscous and solid. The principal mechanism is to dissolve the “solid”. No consensus establishes the ideal soaking time, which may vary from days to weeks. However, shorter soaking times are favored for operational and mechanical considerations. After the first treatment, oil production takes place through natural lifting because of the initial reservoir energy. However, for subsequent cycles, production may have to be aided with pumping. Cyclic injection becomes less and less efficient in oil production as the number of cycles increases. As many as nine cycles can be used depending on the reservoir characteristics.


Continuous steam injection (steam flooding)

This method recovers more oil than cyclic steam injection. It has lower thermal efficiency than CSC and requires a larger surface area. It uses at least two wells, one for steam injection and the other for oil production. Steam flooding recovers about 50 percent of the total oil. Steam is injected at high temperature and pressure through an injector. Steam injection techniques have become more feasible and efficient. Several variations have been developed. However, the high costs involved mandate careful evaluations, in-depth study of the oil reservoir and proper design.


Rock physics

Traditionally, the properties of rocks and minerals beneath the earth's surface were defined through seismic exploration and
seismology Seismology (; from Ancient Greek σεισμός (''seismós'') meaning "earthquake" and -λογία (''-logía'') meaning "study of") is the scientific study of earthquakes (or generally, quakes) and the generation and propagation of elastic ...
from earthquakes. Travel time, variations in phase and amplitude of seismic waves produced during seismic exploration show rock and fluid properties at the subsurface level. Previously, exploration seismology explored seismic data only for rock formations that could hold hydrocarbons. However, due technological advances, seismic data became useful to determine pore fluids, saturation, porosity and
lithology The lithology of a rock unit is a description of its physical characteristics visible at outcrop, in hand or core samples, or with low magnification microscopy. Physical characteristics include colour, texture, grain size, and composition. Lit ...
. Reservoir properties and seismic data have been linkedby a recent development called rock physics. Rock physics has been employed in the development of essential techniques such as reservoir seismic monitoring, direct hydrocarbon detection and seismic lithology discrimination using angle dependent reflectivity. Rock physics applications are based on understanding the different properties that affect seismic waves. These properties influence how waves behave as they propagate and how a change in one of those properties can produce different seismic data. Factors such as temperature, fluid type, pressure, pore type, porosity, saturation and others are interrelated in such a way that when one element changes others change as well.


Gassmann equation

Pore fluid properties and fluid substitution in rock physics are calculated using Gassmann's equation. It calculates how seismic properties are affected by the fluid change using frame features. The equation uses the known bulk moduli of the pore fluid, the solid matrix and the frame module to calculate the bulk modulus of a medium saturated with liquid. The rock-forming minerals are the solid matrix, the frame is the skeleton rock sample, while the pore fluid is gas, water, oil, or some combination. For the equation to be used, the underlying assumptions are that 1) the matrix and the frame are both macroscopically homogeneous; 2) the pores in the rock are all interconnected; 3) the fluid in the pores is frictionless; 4) the fluid system in the rock is a closed system that is it is undrained; and 5) that the fluid in the rock does not in any way interact with the solid to make the frame softer or harder. The first assumption assures that the wavelength of the wave is longer than the pores and grain sizes of the rock. The assumption meets the general range of wave wavelengths and frequencies of the laboratory to seismic range. Assumption 2) suggests that the permeability of the rock pores is uniform and no isolated pores are present in the rock such that a passing wave induces full equilibrium of fluid flow of the pores over a half period cycle of the wave. Since pore permeability is relative to the wavelength and frequency, most rocks meet the assumption. However, for seismic waves, only unconsolidated sands satisfy this assumption, because of their high permeability and porosity. On the other hand, for the high frequencies such as logging and laboratory frequencies, most rocks can meet this assumption. As a result, the velocities calculated using Gassmann's equation are lower than those measured using logging or laboratory frequencies. Assumption 3) suggests that the fluids have no viscosity, but since in reality all fluids have the viscosity, this assumption is violated by Gassmann equations. Assumption 4) suggests that the rock-fluid flow is sealed at the boundaries for a laboratory rock sample meaning that the changes in stresses caused by a passing wave do not cause a significant flow of fluid from the rock sample. Assumption 5) prevents any disrupting interaction between the chemical or physical properties of the rock matrix and the pore fluid. This assumption is not always met because interaction is inevitable and the surface energy is usually changed because of it. For example, when sand interacts with heavy oil, the result is a high shear and bulk modulus mixture.


Sources

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References

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